With the help of the resistance and various other underground groups, you are finally able to reach the little town of Le Chambon. Le Chambon is an old settlement of French Huguenots, people who recall persecution they once experienced at the hands of French Catholics. Because they remember, they help others, Jews and non- Jews, escape from the Nazis. Along the way you have been hidden in hay lofts, wine cellars, and even treetops in orchards. Farmers and their families have risked their lives to shelter and feed you because of a lack of sympathy for the Nazis.
Now, after hiding several more days in a cellar, a villager leads you and several other Jews into Switzerland. The journey is treacherous, especially at night, and you must be very careful. A great deal depends on the success of the trip; you arrive without accident. With the help of Swiss friends of the Chambonnais, you arrive in the Swiss city of Montreux.
You sit on the shore of Lake Geneva and gaze at the Château de Chillon where once another prisoner pondered his fate.
If you believe that you were a prisoner of the Nazis and are now free, continue to page 95.
If you feel imprisoned in the jail of Judaism, continue to page 30.