As a child of nine when the war in Europe ended, I read about the Holocaust secretly. My parents and older siblings all attempted to keep the awful knowledge from me. But as it was my duty to wash up after family meals, and as the dirty plates had to be scraped onto and wrapped in newspaper, I read all the horrific details. From then on, I became afflicted by what would today be called survivor’s guilt.

It was therefore with deep admiration that I read the immensely important book Tunnel of Hope. Dr. Betty Brodsky Cohen, the daughter of Fanya Dunetz Brodsky, an escapee from the Novogrudok labor camp, has given names and faces to most who have no other memorial. She has devoted more than a decade of passionate and devoted research to this feat.

What was the tunnel of hope?

The Tunnel of Hope refers to the tunnel dug with bare hands and primitive tools by the inmates of the Novogrudok labor camp in present-day Belarus. These heroic inmates were the survivors of horrible Nazi massacres (there were previous massacres in all the small surrounding towns from which the inmates came as well as four massacres in Novogrudok alone prior to the escape) in which the majority of them lost many family members. The survivors clung to precarious life due to the fact that they possessed skills needed by the Nazis.
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