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The Red Letter. How Democracies Stamped a Death Sentence
Robert Walker (Author) · Independently published · Paperback
The stamp was not a Nazi invention. It was a democratic demand.
A landmark work of Holocaust narrative nonfiction - for readers of Bloodlands, The Unwanted, While Six Million Died, and Ordinary Men.
In October 1938, a three-centimeter letter in red ink was stamped onto the passports of every Jewish citizen in the German Reich. The mark converted a document of protection into an instrument of death. At every border crossing in the free world, a guard opened the passport, read the letter, and turned the bearer back toward the regime that had marked them.
The democracies did not merely fail to help. They designed the system.
The Red Letter is the definitive history of how the free world engineered the machinery of Jewish exclusion years before the gas chambers were built. It traces how Switzerland demanded the J stamp to keep Jewish refugees out of its territory. How Sweden built a racial classification system to enforce it. How thirty-two nations at the 1938 Évian Conference closed every door while expressing their deepest sympathy for the refugees they refused to admit.
Drawing on the Bergier Commission's findings, the Swedish National Archives, the drafting records of the 1951 Refugee Convention, and the surviving passports themselves, The Red Letter follows the bureaucratic paper trail from negotiating tables in Bern to the gas chambers of Auschwitz - through the border crossings where thirty thousand refugees were turned back, into the filing cabinets that preserved the evidence with a procedural thoroughness no novelist could have invented.
This is not the story of the regime that applied the stamp. That history has been told. This is the story of the democracies that demanded it, the borders that enforced it, and the 1951 convention that was written to ensure it could never happen again - and the uncomfortable question of whether it has.
This is the third book in The Open Door Trilogy, a major work of Holocaust history and historical fiction that examines bureaucracy, conscience, and survival in the darkest chapter of the twentieth century. The Red Letter is the nonfiction capstone to the trilogy, which includes the biographical novels Five Pounds (the escape of the creators of Curious George) and The Forbidden Visa (the story of Aristides de Sousa Mendes). Each book stands alone. The trilogy reads in any order.
A work of narrative nonfiction that will change the way you look at the passport in your pocket.
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