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Vital tours by Cooks

March 17, 2016 13:11

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

What makes ordinary people embark upon the extraordinary? While others stood by as the Nazis began their systematic extermination of the Jews, some decent individuals had the courage to do whatever they could to rescue those destined for the gas chambers.

Ida and Louise Cook belong in this honourable category. Along with such better-known heroes as Schindler, Wallenberg and Winton, they, too, deserve to have their story told and retold, for these sisters were instrumental in helping Jews escape from Germany and Austria before the outbreak of war.

Ida Cook's Safe Passage (Harlequin, £8.99) - first published in 1950 as We Followed Our Stars and now reissued with an introduction by Anne Sebba - is the author's account of her own and her sister's exploits. Theirs is a fascinating story, made all the more compelling by Ida's direct, modest prose.

Born at the turn of the last century, Ida and Louise grew up in a loving household where their parents' strict Christian moral code provided the girls with a firm foundation for life.