Hiltgunt Zassenhaus was 17 when she first resisted the Third Reich by refusing to give the Heil Hitler salute in her high school. Later, as the terrible events of wartime Germany swirled around her, she risked death to smuggle food, medicine, and emotional support to hundreds of political prisoners, ultimately saving them from mass execution by the Nazis.Wallsis her story.
For her wartime work, Zassenhaus was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974.Wallswas named on of the 25 best books of 1974 for young adults by the American Library Association and received a Christopher Award in 1975. An admirable memoir, set down in cool reflection but charged with inescapable emotion. —The New Yorker
A fine adventure story and a good inspirational tale. . . . When so many of us seem crippled by the numbness we see in our society,Wallsreminds us of the power of individual conscience. —The Nation
I recommendWallsto everyone . . . as both an inspiration and a warning. —Ms. Magazine
The suspenseful and dramatic story of one courageous woman's bold deception of the Gestapo. —Book-of-the-Month Club News
Dr. Zassenhaus . . . has written a breath-taking account of her undercover work among prisoners scattered all over Germany. —Horn BookHiltgunt Zassenhaus(1916–2004) was an interpreter during World War II, well-known for helping prisoners held by Nazi Germany. While she interpreted for Scandinavian prisoners under the guise of censoring their correspondence, Zassenhaus instead added information and documented their locations in journals she later turned over to human rights authorities. She attended the University of Hamburg and the University of Copenhagen, and after the war, completed a medical degree at the University of Bergen. She documented her story inWalls: Resisting the Third Reich—One Woman’s Story.