Rooted in history, The Medallion presents a horrendous tale of the citizens of Warsaw, Poland, both Jewish and Polish, confronted with the Nazi invasion during the occupation years beginning in 1939. No one could have predicted the days of murder, starvation, punishment, separation, hatred, fear, and cruelty. Yet, in this novel we have the opportunity to view heroes and heroines at their best, those willing to sacrifice all in order to save a few—children, families, Jews, humans. Soul-wrenching and brilliant at the same time, this WWII novel is brought to life with the suspense and the crimes combined with love, faith, and a willingness to survive.
I’ve visited the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. It is an inspiring place of remembrance. I was handed a passport of a ten-year-old Jewish girl from Warsaw (she had really existed). At each level of the museum I did not know if she would survive or not. In the Warsaw ghetto room, pictures of the victims cover the walls and the ceiling. I cried. So many of the intense instincts of these people, I’ll never experience. As I read this book, I remembered the layers of the museum, some so graphic I couldn’t look. I do remember that my passport of the ten-year-old girl had a good ending. She survived and escaped to the United States. Others perished.
This story will stay with me for a long time. Even in the horrific events of the war and the aftermath, God can heal and forgive and offer second chances.