The Night Fishermen Of Thessaloniki: Greek Sephardic Men Who Operated a Maritime Escape Network for 600 Jews Before Deportation Began (eBook)

The Night Fishermen Of Thessaloniki: Greek Sephardic Men Who Operated a Maritime Escape Network for 600 Jews Before Deportation Began (eBook)

Yitzhak Namias
Yitzhak Namias
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB

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EPUB
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Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Max
Codice EAN: 9798235865709
Anno pubblicazione: 2026
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Descrizione

They saved six hundred people. The world never knew their names. In the winter of 1943, while German deportation trains were being loaded at the freight yards of Thessaloniki, a small group of Sephardic Jewish fishermen were doing something else entirely. They were taking their boats out at night without lights, moving silently through the patrol windows of the Thermaic Gulf, carrying families pressed flat in the bilge of wooden caiques across two hundred kilometers of dark Aegean water toward the Turkish coast. No weapons. No institutional backing. No official record. Just men who knew the sea and understood, with the clarity that comes from having no other option, what the sea could be made to do. This is the story the history books left out. Thessaloniki in 1940 was not merely a Greek city with a Jewish minority. It was a civilization. For four and a half centuries, the Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain in 1492 had built something extraordinary on the shores of northern Greece: a city within a city, speaking medieval Spanish, singing medieval ballads, running the port, fishing the gulf, maintaining thirty-two synagogues, and transmitting to each new generation a culture so precisely preserved that linguists in the twentieth century found echoes of fifteenth-century Castile in the speech of fishwives at the morning market. By 1940, fifty-six thousand people carried this world inside them. By the summer of 1943, forty-six thousand of them were dead. The Night Fishermen of Thessaloniki tells the full story of that destruction and of the extraordinary resistance hidden within it. At its center are three men: Moshe Benveniste, a fisherman who read the Aegean the way others read a page; Yehuda Almosnino, a boat repairer who knew every vessel in the fleet and every weakness in the German harbor patrol schedule; and Haim Saporta, an accountant who carried the network's entire operational record in memory and never wrote a word of it down. Around them: a priest who opened his vestry at midnight, a harbor official who was never at his post on the right nights, and a chain of Turkish fishermen on the other side of the water who asked no questions and kept no records. What they built together was not a resistance organization in any formal sense. It was a web of trust between people who had known each other for decades, who understood the specific obligations of their community and their tradition, and who used the one skill the occupation could not take from them, their knowledge of the sea at night, to do what no one else could do. Based on twelve years of research across archives in Israel, Greece, France, and Germany, and drawing on survivor testimonies collected by Yad Vashem and the Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki, this book reconstructs the network in full for the first time: the crossings, the near-misses, the betrayals that were not quite betrayals, the passengers who waited on cold beaches in the dark for a light that sometimes came and sometimes did not. It is also a book about what was lost. The six hundred who crossed are inseparable from the forty-six thousand who did not, and the story of the fishermen is only fully legible against the scale of the catastrophe they were working against. Both are here, held together as they must be, without sentimentality and without evasion. Yitzhak Namias is the grandson of a man who crossed in April 1943. He writes as a historian and as a descendant, and the combination produces something rare: a work of meticulous scholarship that reads with the urgency of a story told before it disappears entirely. Some debts cannot be paid. They can only be given their true weight at last.