On September 27, 1939, after the Nazi invasion, Poland ceased to exist as
a nation. Ten-year-old Hanna Davidson’s father, Simon, and older brother,
Kazik, had been drafted to defend Warsaw. Hanna and her mother, Sofia,
found themselves subjected to Hitler’s efforts to dehumanize Poland’s Jewish
population. There seemed no choice but to submit to a ruthless tyranny.
Learning that Simon and Kazik were alive in the
Soviet-occupied zone of Poland, Hanna and her mother decided to risk a
harrowing escape from Nazi Poland into safer Soviet territory. With only the
clothes on their backs, they fled their apartment to face a daunting
crossing and the threat of persecution under Stalin's regime.
As recounted by Hanna, the Davidsons’ journey into the Soviet interior
makes for an extraordinary story. More than a memoir of survival, their story is clearly one of a family whose spirit could not be
destroyed by persecution, war, famine, or political oppression.