During the Eichmann Trial in Jerusalem in 1961, investigators uncovered a forgotten precedent from 1943-one that challenged the very logic of obedience on which the Nazi system depended.
The case involved the German commander of a strategic fortress in Nazi-occupied Poland. His refusal to carry out an unlawful order sent shockwaves through the regime and reached the highest levels of Nazi leadership, including Adolf Hitler himself.
What remained was a message intended for future German generations: even at the height of tyranny and propaganda, a German army officer, standing with his loyal men, could still draw a line-and refuse an order that demanded the surrender of innocent lives.
Fredy Hirsch and the Last German Knights is a historically grounded novel based on more than twenty years of original research by Pavel Batel, a Holocaust lecturer, tour guide, and independent historian recognized and respected by leading Holocaust institutions for his work and dedication.
As the founder of the Batel Institute, Batel established a group of professional lecturers and tour guides offering in-depth educational tours of Prague's Jewish Quarter and the Terezín Ghetto and camp. His research focuses especially on Terezín-a place whose history remains only partially understood and too often reduced to simplified narratives.
Drawing on more than fifty documented, in-depth interviews with Holocaust survivors, as well as memoirs, diaries, and archival sources, Batel restores forgotten human dimensions of the Holocaust-including the true story of Prague teenager Heinz Prossnitz, remembered as the "phantom of the Gestapo," whose courage and unwavering loyalty echo the ancient legacy of the Maccabean warriors and demand full recognition.
This book confronts moral complexity, restores erased voices, and challenges a new generation to face history without compromise.