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Hardcover The Brigade: Epic Story of Vengeance, Salvation, and World War II Book

ISBN: 0060194863

ISBN13: 9780060194864

The Brigade: Epic Story of Vengeance, Salvation, and World War II

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Book Overview

An epic true story of three remarkable men and one woman who set out to fight a war and in the process help to create a nation November, 1944. The war in Europe is drawing to a close when the British government finally agrees to send a brigade of five thousand Jewish volunteers from Palestine to Europe to fight the German army. Among these soldiers are Israel Carmi, a veteran of the Haganah underground, a man who serves one army but whose loyalties...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

INCREDIBLE!!!

Not only have I recommended this book to many many friends, I had to buy an extra copy just for loaning purposes! This incredible text about an amazing group of individuals should be read by everyone!! This small band of men changed a world in a very unique way, showing that the human spirit can overcome anything put before it!! Both pride and tears swelled inside me as I have read and re-read this chronicle of history....Howard Blum has my eternal gratitude for sharing a story that might easily have been forgotten!! Researched and written in a way that allows the reader to be part of history!! BRAVO!! I can't say enought about this book....READ IT!!

An epic story finally re-told!

"Before setting out for revenge, one must first dig two graves"-ancient Chinese proverbLike many Americans, I was completely ignorant of the small Isreali brigade mobilized by the British in the closing days of WW II. Howard Blum, in interviewing three key players, brings to life the stunning, action-packed and bloody history of this brigade which fought not just for freedom, but for vengence as well. Blum captures the complex history of British Palestine, the disinigration of post-war Europe, the survival of concentration camp refugees as well as the iron will it took all Isrealis to forge a nation in a just a few pages. Through the words of the survivors he also paints a vivid picture of the slow soul assissination that occurs when one seeks vengence. A lightening fast read that finally flashes some light on a nearly forgotten piece of history. A must read!

The greatest heroes

The turning point of this masterpiece is a short scene in a church. Two soldiers, wearing their Jewish Brigade uniforms, show up to assassinate a Nazi in hiding. Instead, one of the congregants, a young girl, sees them and confesses to them in broken Herbew that she is a Jewish orphan and wants to leave with the soldiers. Suddenly, the soldiers see a shift in their mission from being assassins to rescuing Jews and smuggling them to Israel. This noble mission is completed, at times at odds with the British Army and at times with their tacit aid. This story how one chance encounter leads to the rescue of tens of thousands is a magnificant story that should stand alongside the story of the Exodus from Egypt.

stirring history of WW II Jewish military valor, redemption

Rarely does a history interweave compelling personal histories and enormous social/moral themes as does Howard Blum's moving and convicing "The Brigade." This work does far more than describe the formation, engagements and ultimate triumphs of the first organized Jewish armed forces in two millenia; it firmly places the five thousand Jewish Palestinian volunteers who fought with the Star of David proudly placed on their shoulders in the center of Jewish history. The men who would don British uniforms would fight for a myriad of purposes: out of anger against the unspeakable evil of the Holocaust, from an awareness that they were living rebukes to the notion that Jews served as deseerving recipients of passive suffering, with a sense of their historical purpose of establishing a Jewish homeland and becoming ironic adversaries of the very nation (Britain) which enlisted their service.Though "The Brigade" nobly treats the themes of Jewish armed resistance, vengeance and ultimate salvation, this memorable history above all signals the profound development of a renewed Jewish identity, forged in battle against the background of genocide and ruin, tested by personal sorrow and fortified by a messianic vision of a Jewish homeland for the shattered remnants of European Jewry. The Jewish fighters are proud, heroic and consecrated to their vision; they become increasingly aware of their role in a Jewish future. Initially consumed by rage and the obvious need to crush their German enemy, the three members of The Brigade on whom this history focuses evolve morally. From muderous avengers of the crime of mass murder, these men ultimately perceive their role as guardians of those Jews who survived the Holocaust, especially the children, as central to their lives' meaning.Rich in specific military detail, "The Brigade" is at its best when depicting the personal transformation of its three featured soldiers. Each comprehends a remarkable epiphany during Passover in 1945; each becomes acutely aware of his Jewishness, his place in the enormous task confronting him. The aloof, aristocratic Johanan Peltz discovers his "inescapable and defining" bond with common Jews. "He could neither hide from nor deny it...He was another Jew walking down a long corridor toward a communal destiny." Studious and devoted to his family, Arie Pinchuk finds the moral strength to reconsecrate himself to the search for his family. The contentment of Passover contrasts painfully with that which "had been taken from him," and he resolves that only by redeeming and reclaiming his family could he once again recapture the peace of the holiday. Israel Carmi, a brilliant tactician and resourceful leader of the Jewish Palestinian underground, celebrates the Passover under fire. Yearning for his family in Palestine, Carmi is struck with the awareness "that this makeshift seder in a trench crowded with Jewish soldiers was making all the future seders possible."Blum also deftly interst

An Israeli "Band of Brothers"

An Israeli "Band of Brothers"All those who loved the recent HBO miniseries (and Stephen Ambrose book) "Band of Brothers" will also enjoy "The Brigade" by Howard Bloom. "The Brigade" is the story of the Jewish Brigade Group, a unit made up of Jews - mostly from the then-British mandate of Palestine. Also known as the Jewish Fighting Brigade, it was formed in 1994 and played a critical role in the defeat of the Nazi armies in Northern Italy in 1945 as integral part of the British 8th Army.Like "Band of Brothers", "The Brigade" not only gives us a history of the unit as a whole, but also allows us to get a better understanding of some of the individual members. In place of Dick winters, Lewis Nixon,Carwood Lipton, etc. we have Sgt. Israel Carmi, Cap't Johanthan Peltz, and Lt. Arie Pinchuk.And while "Band of Brothers" reaches it's anticlimax in May of 1945 (or even in earlier in '45, after the victory at Bastogne), the story of the Jewish Brigade only gets more interesting after the war "officially" ends.Though nominally part of the British army, the loyalty of most members was to the Jewish people. Service in the British army was seen merely as a means to an end. It was in this spirit, that the Brigade (aided by elements of American intelligence) started to carry out a campaign to identify and eliminate Nazi war criminals that had evaded Allied arrest. Their efforts as infiltrating and destroying a secret Nazi cabal that was spiriting former SS officers into hiding in South America was as exciting and as filled with intrigue as anything that could come out of the imagination of John Le Carre.The adventure, however, doesn't stop there. The Brigade soon turned to rescuing the remaining Jews of Europe and making sure that they returned to their historical homeland in Palestine. Despite the active opposition of the British and in defiance of British colonial immigration laws, the Brigade was able to help around 68,000 Jews reach the Middle East. Another 50,000 or so werecaptured by the British en route but were able to enter Israel after it had achieved independence in 1948. (The Jewish population of Palestine was about 600,000 in 1945.)The Brigade was the first organized Jewish Army since the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans in 70 CE/AD and Howard Bloom captures well their struggles, anguish and triumphs.
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