Title: The Counterfeit Countess: The Jewish Woman Who Rescued Thousands of
Poles During the Holocaust
Author: Elizabeth B. White and Joanna Sliwa
Narrated by: Gilli Messer
Publisher: Simon
& Schuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 10 hours and 50 minutes
Source: Thank you #HistoryBuffsBookClub, @History_In_Five, Simon & Schuster for the physical book review copy. The audiobook version was purchased from Audible.com.
Do you have a favorite historical figure that you wish would get more recognition? Now that I have learned about Dr. Josephine Janina Mehlberg in The Counterfeit Countess by Elizabeth B. White and Joanna Sliwa, I hope she gets more recognition. This was a perfect book to read for Women’s History month.
Dr. Josephine Janina Mehlberg was a Polish Jewish mathematician who used the identity papers of a Polish aristocrat, Countess Janina Suchodolska, to become a steely woman who saved the lives of thousands of Polish citizens from the Majdanek concentration camp. She delivered food and medicine to help as many as she could. She was almost captured several times but used her wits and brashness to never get captured. This is her amazing story.
My thoughts on
this book:
· Nazis and Russians were good at using prejudice against certain groups of people to divide the populace. Unfortunately, we still see this happening in current times.
· The Polish people saw was happening to the Jews and wondered when it would start to happen to them.
· This book tells the history and events of the day how they related to the overall story.
· The horror and brutality were hard to read at times, like when they opened a cattle car and found the corpses of five hundred frozen children inside.
· Even the “good” people had to be cajoled to help everyone including the Jews and to not just help the people like them (the Poles).
· A horrifying statistic was that 18% of Polish people died in World War II and half of this figure were Jews.
· I liked that Janina had the money and knowledge of the laws to be forceful with the Nazis and save so many lives.
· The story was one of an imposter who as able to do so much good. After the war her life was detailed as well as she immigrated to Canada and then the United States. She ultimately was a professor of mathematics in Chicago. She never talked about her wartime experiences.
· I liked the pictures of Janina included in the physical book.
· The audiobook was fascinating with a great narrator.
The Counterfeit
Countess by Elizabeth B. White and Joanna Sliwa is the true story of a heroic
woman who deserves to be remembered in history as she put herself on the line
to save and help thousands of people in Poland during World War II.









