How can we educate young children about the Holocaust without scaring them? With simple stories told from the perspective of children who escaped.
This collection of true first-person accounts brings to life the rescue of ten thousand children from Nazi-occupied territories to England in the late 1930's.
Between December 1938 and September 1939, 10,000 children were rescued from Nazi-occupied countries and safely transported to England. This rescue mission was called the Kindertransport, and the remarkable experiences of these children are dramatically brought to life in this collection of true first-person accounts. The children's stories are divided among the book's seven chronological chapters:
Life Under Hitler
Kristallnacht
Preparing to Leave
The Journey
Life in England
The War Years
After the War
A brief historical introduction to each chapter sets the scene for the children's stories to follow
Key vocabulary terms are highlighted and defined throughout the text
The scrapbook-style design, complete with authentic archival photos, makes these true stories accessible to young readers
An introductory letter and epilogue from the authors, real-life Kinder