by Margaretha Shemin
illustrated by Peter Spier
1963 / 76 pages
This is a Dutch World War II story with a difference: one of the heroes is a German soldier.
Little Johanna doesn’t think much of Germans when the story begins. As her own private act of resistance she has vowed never to look a Nazi soldier in the eyes. But when her family is force to billet a German officer Johanna find the man hard to hate. Captain Braun is polite and quiet, a man who walks softly… except when he has to come into Grandmother and Grandfather’s part of the house. Then he stomps noisily with his boots, “so that they could hear him long before he knocked on the door. There was always time to hide the radio behind the books in the bookcase.”
Captain Braun later provides some very unexpected help to Johanna when she has to hide the 12 ancient metal horsemen from the town’s cherished church clock. The Germans want to melt these “little riders” down and use their metal to make bullets but the two of them tuck the horsemen away in a very clever spot.
Perhaps the most important lesson here for our little ones to learn is that many of the German people should be counted among Hitler’s victims.
Short chapters, and simple line drawings make this an accessible story for children as young as Grade 1.