EBOOK

The Counterfeit Countess

The untold story of the Jewish heroine who defied the Holocaust

Elizabeth White
(0)
Pages
336
Year
2024
Language
English

About

'Powerful. . . . A heart-wrenching profile of resilience, ingenuity, and heroism.' Publisher's Weekly



'A story of courage, compassion, and cunning so profound that it must be included with the greatest Holocaust literature. Janina Mehlberg is a heroine for the ages.' - Larry Loftis, New York Times bestselling author of The Watchmaker's Daughter

The Holocaust has given rise to many accounts of resistance and rescue, but The Counterfeit Countess is unique. It tells the remarkable, untold story of 'Countess Janina Suchodolska', a Jewish woman named Janina Mehlberg who rescued more than 10,000 Poles imprisoned by their country's Nazi occupiers.

Using the identity papers of a Polish aristocrat, she worked as a welfare official while also serving in the Polish resistance. With guile, cajolery, and steely persistence, 'the Countess' persuaded SS officials to release thousands of Poles from the Majdanek concentration camp. Incredibly, she eluded detection, survived the war and eventually emigrated to the USA. Drawing on the manuscript of Mehlberg's own unpublished memoir, supplemented with prodigious research, , historians and Holocaust experts Elizabeth White and Joanna Sliwa have uncovered the full story of this extraordinary woman.

Unsparing yet inspiring, The Counterfeit Countess is an unforgettable account of selfless courage in the face of unspeakable cruelty, and a major addition to the history of the Holocaust. Elizabeth White (Author)

Dr Elizabeth 'Barry' White recently retired

from the United States Holocaust Memorial

Museum, where she served as historian and as

Research Director for the museum's Center for

the Prevention of Genocide. Prior to working

for the USHMM, Barry spent a career at the US

Department of Justice working on investigations

and prosecutions of Nazi criminals and other

human-rights violators. She served as deputy

director and chief historian of the Office of

Special Investigations and as deputy chief and

chief historian of the Human Rights and Special

Prosecutions Section. She lives in Falls Church,

Virginia.

Joanna Sliwa (Author)

Dr Joanna Sliwa is an historian at the Conference

on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany

(Claims Conference) in New York, where she

also administers academic programmes. She

previously worked at the American Jewish Joint

Distribution Committee, and at the Museum

of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to

the Holocaust. She has taught Holocaust

and Jewish history at Kean University and at

Rutgers University and has served as a historical

consultant and researcher, including for the PBS

film In the Name of Their Mothers: The Story of

Irena Sendler. Her first book, Jewish Childhood

in Kraków: A Microhistory of the Holocaust

won the 2020 Ernst Fraenkel Prize awarded

by the Wiener Holocaust Library. She lives in

Linden, New Jersey.

A fascinating biography of the incredible Janina (Pepi Spinner) Mehlberg, a German-Jewish mathematician who saved the lives of many inmates of the Majdanek concentration and extermination camp at Lublin in Poland during the Second World War - which she did by posing as a bogus Polish aristocrat named Countess Janina Suchodolska. The first ever published account of the extraordinary humanitarian work of Janina Mehlberg - based on her own private memoir Brilliantly combines historical narrative with Janina's own unpublished account of her wartime activities An untold story of the Holocaust that reaffirms the courage of ordinary people who do extraordinary things in the face of torture and death

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