In immense underground bunkers, you store food and weapons, hundreds of partisans are able to hide in these bunkers. Air to breathe is piped in through tubes that rise above ground in thickets and hollow tree stumps. Once, when Germans were closing in on you, you concealed the entrance to the bunker with the carcasses of dead horses and the Germans avoided the area. Meanwhile, you are able to continue raiding German communication and transportation facilities, impeding their war effort.
In 1944, when the Russian army liberates the area, you decide to return to Poland, to your home city of Cracow. You begin the long trip, only to discover groups of bandits led by Stefan Bandera. These anti- Semitic Ukrainians will attack anyone for their own advantage, but they particularly gain satisfaction harassing Jews. You must be extraordinarily careful, traveling only at night and hiding from Bandera during the day. You are angry that although the war is over, your life is still in danger. The government is doing nothing to protect you. You feel you deserve more help, considering the price you have paid during the last three years.