Why Jewish heroine Hannah Senesh is having her moment of renewed interest
Description
The name Hannah Senesh is a household legend for many Israelis, and also for Diaspora Jews of a certain generation–especially those who attended Jewish school. Over the years, there have been books and films and documentaries about her, and even a recent re-enactment of Senesh’s famous 1944 military commando mission when she and dozens of Jewish volunteers parachuted back into Nazi occupied Europe to try to rescue tens of thousands of imperilled Jews and also save downed Allied pilots.
But Canadian journalist and author Douglas Century, of Calgary, felt there was more to discover about the brave Hungarian teenager who escaped growing antisemitism in her native Budapest at the start of the Second World War, to pursue her Zionist ideals as an illegal immigrant to British Mandate Palestine in 1939.
Senesh was eventually captured by Hungarian collaborators, tortured, and despite an offer of clemency if she confessed, was executed by firing squad eighty-one years ago this week, on Nov. 7, 1944. She was only 23. Her poems and diaries were recovered after her death, and published, like Anne Frank’s. One poem, known as “Eli Eli”, is regularly sung at Holocaust remembrance ceremonies.
Douglas Century joins host Ellin Bessner on today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast to explain why his new book about Hannah Senesh aims to challenge the historical record that the wartime mission was a failure.
Related links
- Learn more about Douglas Century’s new book about Hannah Senesh at the Canadian book launch on Nov. 19 at Toronto’s Holy Blossom Temple.
- Order the book “Crash of the Heavens: The Remarkable Story of Hannah Senesh”.
- Read The CJN’s Treasure Trove from 2024 paying tribute on the 80th anniversary of Hannah Senesh’s execution.
Credits
- Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
- Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
- Music: Bret Higgins
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