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THE FORBIDDEN VISA. Aristides de Sousa Mendes and the Three Days of Rescue (en Inglés)
Robert Walker (Autor) · Independently published · Tapa Blanda
Quedan más de 100 unidades
24,91 €The true story behind the largest single-person rescue of the Holocaust - now told as a sweeping historical novel for readers of All the Light We Cannot See, The Tattooist of Auschwitz, and Schindler's List.
In June 1940, as France collapsed and the German army marched on Paris, Portuguese consul Aristides de Sousa Mendes faced an impossible choice: obey his dictator's orders to deny visas to Jewish refugees - or sacrifice his career, his family, and everything he had built to save strangers he would never see again.
He chose to save them.
For three days and three nights, Sousa Mendes sat at his desk in Bordeaux and signed visas. Thirty thousand of them. To anyone who came. No questions asked. He knew it would destroy him. He signed anyway.
Among the lives he saved:
The Forbidden Visa is a meticulously researched biographical novel of one of the most extraordinary - and long-hidden - rescue stories of World War II. Drawing on archives in Lisbon, Jerusalem, and Washington, and on the testimonies of survivors and their descendants, it follows Sousa Mendes from the velvet corridors of Salazar's Portugal through the panic of the Fall of France to the border crossings where life and death turned on a single stamp.
It also tells the story of what came after: the trial that stripped him of his rank, the blacklist that destroyed his children's futures, the poverty that reduced his family to eating at a Jewish soup kitchen fed by the very community he had saved. He died forgotten in 1954. Yad Vashem recognized him as Righteous Among the Nations in 1966. Portugal apologized in 1988.
This is the second book in The Open Door Trilogy, a sweeping series of Holocaust historical fiction based on true stories of courage, exile, and moral conscience in the darkest chapter of the twentieth century. Each novel stands alone.
The Forbidden Visa asks the question that echoes from 1940 to today: when the machinery of exclusion demands your compliance, what will you do?
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