A tree survives the Holocaust, though most of the children who cared for it don’t.
It’s winter in Terezin, the Czechoslovakian propaganda camp with which the Nazis tricked the credulous Red Cross into believing their treatment of Jews was humane. Here, children are allowed to attend school, and one teacher, Irma Lauscher, has the children plant a smuggled-in maple sapling. Miraculously, the children keep the tree alive in the camp, even as they themselves weaken or die. Art and text combine for an honest yet optimistic and age-appropriate portrayal of a difficult topic. When they first see the tree, the children are still round-faced if ragged, their pale, large-eyed faces capable of joy. As the war continues and the tree grows, the children’s faces grow wearier, their bodies huddled against cold and despair. Many of the children vanish entirely; although only the author’s note clarifies that these children have been murdered in Auschwitz, a foreboding spread of a deportation train (“taken away on trains to a place that was even worse”) nonetheless makes clear that their fates are dire. Despite the mass murder, the tree survives—as does Irma. In 2021, a cutting from the tree was planted in New York City. Now the somber hues, punctuated by reds, give way to a hopeful green surrounding the racially diverse children of New York—round-faced and joyful.
A gentle, accessible take on resilience.
(sources) (Picture book. 5-8)