Darkness over Denmark: The Danish Resistance and the Rescue of the Jews, written by Ellen Levine, is a book about a collection of acts of bravery and stories by people residing in Denmark during Germany's control. These individual and true stories focus on the lives of Jewish individuals, documenting their experience and treatment during these years.
On April 9, 1940, the Danish people woke up to the sound of planes. Amongst these people, lay 8,000 Jews. Denmark was known as a neutral country and was untouched throughout World War I. The surprise invasion of Denmark came as a shock to all. Denmark surrendered to the Nazis, giving them control.
This book does excels at describing different types of people, showing the relationships between Nazi authority and Danish authority, Danish civilians and Nazi authority, Danish civilians and Danish authority, amongst others. Throughout the book, there is a plethora of short stories documenting the treatment of different groups of people in Nazi-occupied Germany. For example, whilst a Danish woman was biking past a landfill, she held her nose and a Nazi soldier stopped her. She was told to stay with them until she got used to the smell, and then the Danish police were called. This action gives a clear depiction of the Nazis treatment towards Danes. The Danish police, once they’d gotten this woman in their vehicle and away from the soldiers, told the woman that she would be taken back to her home. She was told to do her best to avoid the Nazis and was peacefully taken to where she needed to be. The Danish police were sympathetic with civilians and their struggles with Nazis, and it showed. This story is only one of the many found within this well-written, insanely interesting book.
I would surely recommend this book to anyone that has any sort of interest in history or real-life events. It has many things I like about it such as the individuality of each story, the clear depictions of relationships between Danes and Germans, and the historical knowledge within.