Cover Image: The Jewish Brigade

The Jewish Brigade

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Member Reviews

It doesnt support or open after I download the protected pdf version of it.

It's also not showing in my shelf in netgalley and I cant open it to read

Please look into the issue and if you can send me the pdf in my mail ID- taniagungunsarkar@gmail.com

I cant read the book from here.

Please look into the issue and deliver me the book to review properly, moreover i was pretty excited about this book

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In October 1944, His Majesty's Jewish Infantry Brigade was established starting with over 5,ooo Jewish volunteers. Five long years of political debate. Five long years before the soldiers of the Jewish Brigade were allowed to travel with the eighth British Army. "...the Brits were never really that thrilled about the notion of giving Jews a chance to gain military experience on the front. They're afraid that experience might be used against them in Mandatory Palestine."

The Jewish Brigade fought alongside troops from other nations from March 1945 until the end of the war in May 1945. Their manpower and determination, fueled by the loss of family and friends in the Holocaust, spurred them on to help defeat the Germans in Italy. Some Jewish volunteers were concentration camp survivors.

In "The Jewish Brigade" a graphic novel written by Marvano with illustrations by Berengere Marquebreuco, the reader travels with two fictional soldiers, Ari and Leslie, as they searched for Nazi officers in hiding. They discovered a war criminal who had reinvented himself as a priest. He asked for mercy...Hmm. Safaya Mehringer, a young Jewish girl, had been protected and nurtured by nuns. Sister Maria taught all the children in her care how to speak English and other things that could "prove useful". Safaya begged Ari and Leslie to help her reach Palestine. How to get a safe conduct pass from the Russians? Provide cartons of Lucky Strike cigarettes. No liquor needed this time. Leslie continued to search for information about his mother and fiancee who were unaccounted for in the chaos of an unthinkable war. Some citizens looked the other way, disinterested in the plight of millions, while others worked for the Jewish Underground and tried to help displaced persons and freedom fighters get to Palestine. "...after the ovens, that's the only place we want to go." In 1948, Leslie arrived in Palestine with a cargo of arms. Israel's War of Independence would soon begin.

This graphic novel provided this reader with insights old and new, albeit, many disturbing facts about the Holocaust. "Some 30,000 Jewish volunteers from Palestine served with the British forces during WWII. (Jewish Brigade Group/Holocaust Encyclopedia) A most informative read I highly recommend.

Thank you Naval Institute Press and Net Galley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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These comics are so good! I definitely recommend them for a personal collection. However, because they are pretty graphic I would not implement them into my classroom.

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I will confess I did a double take to ensure that I wasn't missing a page or three at the ending, as it does end as abruptly as other reviewers point out. An English publication of a Belgian series, it makes for a quick read that, while expositorily clunky at some points, still cuts its narrative path through Italy, Austria, and Palestine right up until the clock strikes Midnight on May 14th in 1948

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"The Jewish Brigade" graphic novel was published in 2016 and was written by Marvano (Mark van Oppen) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvano). He has authored or coauthored many graphic novels.

I received an ARC of this novel through https://www.netgalley.com in return for a fair and honest review. I categorize this novel as ‘R’ because it contains scenes of Violence. The story is set in Poland shortly after the end of World War II. The primary characters are Leslie and Ari, both British soldiers part of the Jewish Brigade. The Jewish Brigade was created as part of the British Army in 1944 and saw action primarily in Italy. It was made up of over 5000 volunteers from Mandatory Palestine.

Leslie and Ari are looking for Jewish refugees as well as former Nazis hiding among the population.

I enjoyed the 25 minutes I spent reading this 50-page WWII graphic novel. I normally do not pick graphic novels to review, but because this one dealt with WWII I decided to give it a try. It was an interesting story with very good artwork. I like the cover art. I give this novel a 4 out of 5.

My book reviews are also published on Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/31181778-john-purvis).

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This was for me a very welcome return to the world of the Jewish Brigade, as I'd only seen the first third of this trilogy. No end of publishers' machinations will make me convinced it ever needed six covers to house it, when two will do, although it is in distinct parts. We start with two soldiers from the British-attached Jewish Brigade, hunting down Nazi bigwigs who thought they were living in safety and anonymity immediately post-war. This is a land (still unconvincingly Polish-looking) where some Jews are trying to go home, and still finding a distinct lack of welcome. The middle third splits our two guys up, but veers towards Graz, and a place whose Jews are definitely under the butcher's knife in the great carve-up of Europe between the Allies and the Soviets. The final part is different again, as the lead characters find themselves in what will become Israel – as long as the Arab Legion actually stop carrying on where Hitler was forced to leave off.

It's not a perfect book – Basil Exposition is here with clunking back-story reporting from the main characters more than once, and as I say the locales don't get the feel of the real thing. The characters turning up Zelig-like in multiple key places also rings false for what is actually such an important document, a reportage of anti-Zionist feeling across two continents. And of course, it will only split opinion, ending as it does with both a hopeful feel and the start of the first Arab-Israeli War, having proven as useful in covering the birth of Israel to the relevant depth as a potato peeler is in open-cast mining.

But I don't think you need to sell Zionism, or Israel, or justify what's gone on in the seventy years of her modern existence, when what you're concerned with is the Holocaust and the rippling echoes of it that reached across the continent and right through to the Levant. These pages are about the stung stinging back, about what happens when you goad a nationalism, and a patriotism, into a beleaguered people. It was most poignant to have read the first section a few years ago, when the opposition here in Britain were rampantly anti-Semitic. I was surprised how little the middle chunk showed such energising material, and I didn't find that part much cop at all. Things rally before the (to repeat, awkward) end, though, meaning this deserves its four stars.

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