Oh, where to begin?
In 1988, I watched a movie on the Disney Channel called, “Friendship in Vienna”, and was immediately hooked. Such a beautiful story of two young girls, best friends since 1st grade, whose relationship gets severely tested when Germany annexes Austria in 1938. Once I saw at the end that the movie was based on a book, “The Devil in Vienna”, I HAD to get it! It turned up under the Christmas tree that year, and I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve re-read it over the years. The book and movie both get 5 stars from me; it’s one of the very few book-to-movie adaptations that I would rate that highly.
No matter how many times I get into this book, it still touches me. Lieselotte and Inge are just two normal little girls. They are determined to stay friends, even though Nazi ideology makes that downright dangerous for Catholics and Jews to “mix”. The part that just wrings my heart every time is the scene where Lieselotte goes to a priest to intercede for Inge’s family, putting herself at risk. As they speak together, the priest, at first reluctant to disobey the laws of God and state, realizes that not saving people from certain harm must certainly be breaking God’s law.
And of all the characters, Inge’s Opa Oskar is my favorite. He is wise to the world, and thankfully has the foresight to realize what Hitler’s rise to power will mean for Jews in Vienna before it becomes too late. There is a special bond between the grandfather and Inge; she practices English with him to help him when he emigrates to America. And he, in turn, sends her off to have fun on the day of his departure, rather than have her watch him “disappear into the distance.”
The descriptions of life after Hitler’s take-over are well-drawn, and at times, very chilling. The disposal of the books with Jewish characters, the attitudes of even very young children towards Jews, and how the school’s curriculum abruptly changes to Nazi ideology never fails to make me draw a breath and think, “How, and why?!”
This book has been banned from many libraries, and I think that is a shame. I think anyone who reads this book could learn a lot from it.