Another story of amazing bravery… not once, but over and over and over again
~~~~~
She sedated her three-year-old daughter, wrapped her in a blanket, and tucked her inside a large leather suitcase. Then, with her heart in her throat, she stood in line to leave the Nazi ghetto, under the icy gaze of armed guards.
When she was finally outside and her child was safe, she did the unthinkable: she went back. And then she saved another child. And another. She did this dozens of times, risking her life with every step she took.
For most of her life, that little girl, Henia Lewin, believed her mother, Gita Wisgardisky, had performed a single, desperate miracle just for her. It wasn’t until her mother’s funeral many years later that the full truth emerged.
A survivor approached Henia and revealed that she wasn’t the only one. Gita had smuggled many children out of the Kovno Ghetto, hidden in suitcases or carried through secret passages, one by one, right under the noses of the oppressors.
Henia was born in 1940 in Lithuania into a normal Jewish family. That normalcy vanished when the Nazis invaded and forced the Jewish population into the ghetto. In that place, hunger, disease, and sudden deportations were the only certainties.
Gita saw through the lies early on. While some hoped for the best, she understood that when the Nazis spoke of “relocating” children, they meant killing them.
Gita refused to wait for the end. Working with a brave Lithuanian Catholic priest, she found families willing to hide Jewish children in the countryside.
But the journey out was a suicide mission.
The children had to be perfectly still and silent. If a baby cried or a toddler spoke at the checkpoint, everyone involved would be executed on the spot.
This was why Gita used sedatives. She put her own daughter into a deep sleep, placed her in that heavy leather bag, and walked toward the guards.
When a soldier stopped her, Gita didn’t panic. She offered her watch and her best pair of boots as a bribe. The guard took them, and she passed through the gates.
Little Henia was taken in by a Christian family. She was taught to call strangers “mom” and “dad” and to never mention her real name. Though she was only three, the gravity of the situation was so clear that she kept that secret for two long years.
Meanwhile, Gita went back into the nightmare. She returned to the ghetto to find more children. Each trip involved a new suitcase, more sedatives, and a fresh set of lies.
Every single time she approached the guards, she was betting her life against the slim hope of saving a child. She didn’t keep a list or ask for recognition; she simply acted.
Miraculously, both Gita and her husband Jonas survived the war and were reunited with Henia. They moved to the United States, where Henia grew up to become a teacher and a voice for Holocaust education. But the true scale of her mother’s bravery remained a secret until that day at the cemetery. “
Your mother saved so many,” the survivor told her. “No one knows how many. Maybe she didn’t even know herself. She didn’t count them.”
Today, Henia shares this story because memory is not just a record of the past; it is a torch that must be passed from hand to hand. Even when the story is heavy and painful, it must be told.
True love wins fear.
>We Are Human Angels<
Authors
Awakening the Human Spirit
We are the authors of 'We Are Human Angels,' the book that has spread a new vision of the human experience and has been spontaneously translated into 14 languages by readers.
We hope our writing sparks something in you!
#TrueHeroism #History #Inspiration #NeverForget #Humanity #Holocaust
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