That’s the title of a booklet from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. It has pictures and stories of people who helped people escape during the Nazi terror in Europe. Some were government officials, like Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese diplomat in Lithuania, who issued about 2000 visas for Jews to get to Japan and from there to safe countries.
Ukrainians Tatyana and Ania Kontsevich sheltered Shimon Redlich along with his mother, aunt, and uncle in their attic and shed. Ania, who was ten, was in charge of bringing them food and water.
When the Germans occupied Serbia, the Mandils, a Jewish family from Belgrade, escaped to Albania. Mr. Mandil opened a photography shop and hired Refik Veseli, a 16-year-old Albanian Muslim as his apprentice. When the Mandils were threatened by deportation after Germany occupied Albania in 1943, Rafik Veseli convinced his parents to hide the Mandils in their home village. The children posed as Muslims. Their parents lived in the barn until liberation.