The Holocaust was on such a vast scale that no amount of published recollections by survivors could ever tell the complete story. Each memoir adds an important element: an aspect of the narrative, an account of survival, a testimony to human suffering and endurance. In this memoir, we learn a great deal about one of the neglected aspects of the Jewish experience during the Second World War: the acts of resistance carried out by those who found the means, and the will, to challenge the mighty German war machine and apparatus of destruction.
This 👆 is why I read so many Holocaust memoirs. Every time I learn something new, I gain new, better, more nuanced understanding of the events that took place and how such atrocities could occur. I have read other true accounts of resistance but this is the first account I read by an actual participant. Rather Die Fighting offers very personal and profound insight to the mindset of not only the Jews that participated in the resistance but of those Jews that complied with German directives. It also offers painful, horrifying, tragic insight to the antisemitic sentiments of the Polish population before, during and after the war and shines light on how countless Poles were actively complicit in the acts of atrocity, not just through indifference and/or fear, but also through malice. At the same time, Blaichman shares numerous acts of generosity, kindness and humanity by non-Jewish Poles who aided the resistance fighters with food, shelter, warnings, weapons and more.
In a much broader sense, I read these memoirs because the danger and effects of propaganda and bigotry are ever present and to ignore, dismiss or minimize its impact is not only foolish, it results in similar outcomes even if on a smaller scale. Still, is there any scale of hate or bigotry that we should accept complacently?
This memoir was riveting and well written. I borrowed it from the library but it would have been worth it if I’d have had to buy it outright.
5 stars