His story reads like something out of a spy novel: Risking death at the hands of a brutal dictator, a member of an underground resistance group expertly forges documents that help thousands of people escape to freedom.
Except these events actually happened, and the forger wasn’t a seasoned resistance fighter but a shy Jewish teenager who had worked as an apprentice in a clothes-dyeing/dry-cleaning shop. During World War II, Adolfo Kaminsky resourcefully adapted the skills he’d learned on the job to make fake IDs and other documents that helped thousands of fellow Jews in France escape deportation to German concentration camps.
At one point, he had three days to produce 900 birth and baptismal certificates and food ration cards for 300 Jewish children who were about to be rounded up by Nazi authorities. The goal was to deceive the Germans until the children were sent off to safety with families in the countryside or convents, or smuggled to Switzerland or Spain. He forced himself to stay awake for two straight days, telling himself, “In one hour I can make 30 blank documents. If I sleep for an hour, 30 people will die.”
Kaminsky is now 91 years old and living in Paris, and his daughter, Sarah Kaminsky, has told his gripping story in a book recently translated into English, Adolfo Kaminsky: A Forger’s Life.
His story reads like something out of a spy novel: Risking death at the hands of a brutal dictator, a member of an underground resistance group expertly forges documents that help thousands of people escape to freedom.
Except these events actually happened. The forger wasn’t a seasoned resistance fighter. He was a shy Jewish teenager. He had worked as an apprentice in a clothes-dyeing/dry-cleaning shop. During World War II, that teenager, Adolfo Kaminsky, adapted the skills he’d learned on the job to make fake IDs and other documents. That helped thousands of fellow Jews in France escape deportation to German concentration camps.
At one point, he had three days to produce 900 birth and baptismal certificates and food ration cards for 300 Jewish children who were about to be rounded up by Nazi authorities. The goal was to deceive the Germans until the children were sent off to safety with families in the countryside or to convents. Some were smuggled to Switzerland or Spain. Adolfo forced himself to stay awake for two straight days. He told himself, “In one hour I can make 30 blank documents. If I sleep for an hour, 30 people will die.”
Kaminsky is now 91 years old and living in Paris. His daughter, Sarah Kaminsky, has told his gripping story in a book recently translated into English, Adolfo Kaminsky: A Forger’s Life.