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	 The French Boy Whose Forged Papers Saved 14,000 Jews 
  
      
     	 “This story, brought to us by our friends at Jewniverse, is of a Jewish boy, Adolfo  Kaminsky, whose gift for forgery was put to use by the French resistance” 
We  bring many stories to you that are set during the Holocaust, and many of them  find Gentiles standing up for what is right in order to save Jewish people from  persecution or worse. This story, brought to us by our friends at Jewniverse, is of a Jewish boy, Adolfo  Kaminsky, whose gift for forgery was put to use by the French resistance, and  which ultimately saved more than 14,000 Jews from  certain death:  
Finding out that your parent has a second life  isn’t typically a good thing. But for French author Sarah Kaminsky, learning  the full story of her father’s past changed her life for the better. And next  month, the English translation of her nail-biting book, Adolfo Kaminsky: A Forger’s Life (DoppleHouse Press) will make the heroism and selflessness of her dear old dad  available to millions more readers. As a teenager during the Nazi occupation of  Paris, Adolfo, who was born to a Russian Jewish family in Argentina but raised  in France, was recruited by the French Resistance to create false travel  documents. Ultimately, using the skills he learned from his job at a dye shop,  he became the Resistance’s primary forger, and saved approximately 14,000 Jews. For the next 25 years, Adolfo worked as a photographer  while, unbeknownst to most of those around him, he continued his secret life as  what he calls a “humanist forger.” He joined the Haganah, creating papers so  homeless survivors could settle in Palestine... IFCJ News 
     “This story, brought to us by our friends at Jewniverse, is of a Jewish boy, Adolfo  Kaminsky, whose gift for forgery was put to use by the French resistance” |   | 
 
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