cover image Tree of Life: How a Holocaust Sapling Inspired the World

Tree of Life: How a Holocaust Sapling Inspired the World

Elisa Boxer, illus. by Alianna Rozentsveig. Rocky Pond, $18.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-5936-1712-0

Irma Lauscher (1904–1985) carried out two enduring acts of resistance in the Terezin ghetto during WWII. She secretly taught the children imprisoned with her to read, write, and celebrate the Jewish holidays, and with help, obtained a maple sapling in observance of Tu BiShvat. She and her students planted it in a hidden corner, sharing precious drops of water with the growing tree, which became known throughout Terezin as Etz Chaim, the Tree of Life. “Fewer and fewer children were left to care for the tree”—one image shows a frightened youth holding a leaf during a deportation to “a place that was even worse.” But the tree and Lauscher survive and serve as witnesses: the tree thrives for more than six decades, and Lauscher, who “saw to it that seeds from the tree were planted all over the world,” memorializes all of those who were denied a future. Boxer (A Seat at the Table) and illustrator Rozentsveig strike a reportorial tone in measured prose and softly textured digital art of largely pale-skinned historical figures, conveying both the necessity and limits of hope in the darkest of times. An author’s note concludes. Ages 5–9. (Jan.)