He entered France as a free man. Years later, he left as a convicted war criminal.
Peter Robert Landsberg, a German Jew, had built a new life for himself in France, far from the political turmoil of his homeland. But in the heated atmosphere of the post-war period, his German citizenship proved to be his undoing. What followed was an eight-year martyrdom in the notorious prisons of Fresnes and Clairvaux. Surrounded by French collaborators and other German inmates, Landsberg began an unexpected journey into the abyss of human suffering-and toward an unshakable inner strength.
But this is not just the chronicle of a judicial tragedy. It is the deeply moving story of an inner transformation. In the face of total hopelessness, Landsberg found unshakeable strength in his faith. After his late release, he transformed his own suffering into a driving force for good, becoming a tireless advocate for other prisoners within the "Stille Hilfe" (Silent Help) association.
Based on Landsberg's own poignant writings, this book reveals an almost forgotten chapter of European post-war history. It is an inspiring testament to the resilience of the human spirit and the timeless question of justice in a world shaped by the victors.
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History