Bound To Stay Bound

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 Girl who fought back : Vladka Meed and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
 Author: Greene, Joshua

 Publisher:  Scholastic Focus (2024)

 Dewey: 940.53
 Classification: Biography
 Physical Description: 142 p., ill., 22 cm

 BTSB No: 397217 ISBN: 9781338880519
 Ages: 9-12 Grades: 4-7

 Subjects:
 Miedzyrzecki, Feigele Peltel
 Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa (Poland)
 Jewish teenagers -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Biography
 World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Poland
 Holocaust, 1939-1945 -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Biography
 Jews -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Biography
 Warsaw (Poland) -- History -- Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, 1943

Price: $23.28

Summary:
When Vladka's family is deported to concentration camps, Vladka joins up with other young people in the ghetto who are part of the Jewish underground: a group determined to fight back against the Nazis, no matter the cost. Vladka's role in the underground? To pass as a non-Jew, sneaking out of the ghetto to blend into Polish society while smuggling secret messages and weapons back over the ghetto wall.


Reviews:
   School Library Journal (00/05/24)
   Booklist (04/15/24)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 05/01/2024 Gr 5 Up—In this latest entry in the narrative nonfiction series, readers learn about Vladka Meed, a teenage girl who completed hundreds of daring missions for the Resistance in World War II Warsaw. Born Feige Peltel to a Jewish family, her light brown hair and gray-green eyes masked her true identity. Her appearance allowed her to take risks others could not, securing a job, money, and food for her family forcibly relocated to Warsaw's Jewish ghetto. Her father died from illness and her mother, sister, and brother were deported to death camps. Deciding to use her appearance as a way to fight back, she joined ZOB, the Jewish Resistance, and was given the code name Vladka. She was able to blend in with the Christian Polish population, carrying out missions outside ghetto walls to secure weapons, money, and refuge for Jewish women and children. Interspersed with accounts of her increasingly dangerous exploits are short, fact-dense chapters adding context through historical details and period photographs. Greene's direct, engaging style will keep readers turning pages and emotionally invested in Meed's role in shaping history through the 1980s, when she and her husband established the Registry of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, a worldwide database with information on more than 200,000 individuals. Back matter is limited to a glossary and acknowledgments listing the author's sources, including Meed's memoir, published in English in 1993. VERDICT Ideal for classroom study of the Holocaust and for history lovers. Recommended.—Marybeth Kozikowski - Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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