THE COLOR OF COURAGE – A Boy at War: The World War II Diary of Julian Kulski
by Julian Kulski
Introduction by Rabbi Michael Schudrich
Foreword by Lech Wałęsa

Format, ISBN & Retail Price:
Hardcover: 978-1-60772-015-7 ($29.95)
Trade Paperback : 978-1-60772-016-4 ($19.95)
Ebook (all major formats): 978-1-60772-019-5 ($12.99)
Size: 6 in x 9 in
Page Count: 496
Includes: More than 150 black & white photos, maps and illustrations; 11 groundbreaking Digital Extras (short historical videos); 2 appendices; contextualizing historical material; Discussion Questions; index

 

The Color of Courage

About the Book

 


Buy It Now!

 

“I can’t say I really want to die, but I can see now that
there are times when one has to be prepared to do just that.”

— Julian Kulski, age 12

 

A Selection of the HISTORY BOOK CLUB®
     and the MILITARY BOOK CLUB®

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Winner of the Benjamin Franklin
GOLD Award for Interior Design (1-2 Color
)
and the SILVER Award for Autobiography/Memoir

 

 

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“If there is going to be a war, I do not want to miss it.”
— Julian Kulski, age 10

 So writes Julian Kulski a few days before the outbreak of World War II, in this remarkable diary of a boy at war from ages 10 to 16. As the war unfolds through his eyes, we are privileged to meet a rare soul of indomitable will, courage and compassion.

Kulski, the son of the Deputy Mayor of Warsaw, is a 10-year-old Boy Scout when the Germans invade Poland in September 1939. He soon begins waging his own private war against the Germans with small acts of sabotage. At age 12, Kulski is recruited into the clandestine Underground Army by his Scoutmaster and begins training in military tactics and weapons handling. At 13, he accompanies his commander on a secret mission into the Warsaw Ghetto to liaise with leaders of the Jewish Resistance.

Arrested by the Gestapo at age 14, Kulski is incarcerated in the notorious Pawiak Prison, beaten, interrogated at Gestapo headquarters, and sentenced to Auschwitz. After being rescued, he joins the Ninth Commando Company of the Underground Army, and at age 15 fights in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944.

Taken prisoner by the Germans, 16-year-old Kulski ends the war in a POW camp, finally risking a dash for freedom onto an American truck instead of waiting for “liberation” by the Soviets.