Witold Pilecki was born in 1901 and lived a life in danger. When the Nazis invaded Poland, he resisted. In 1940, he made a decision that sounds unbelievable. He let himself get captured so that he could infiltrate Auschwitz and see for himself.

Tomasz Serafinski built a clandestine network and illegally issued reports that detailed the camp and its horrific conditions. The Allies took their time to accept the reports. Maybe they did not wish to hear the truth. After nearly a thousand days in the horrible location, he escaped in 1943 and documented all of it. The truth was evident and documented, but the world barely noticed it.

When the war ended, Poland was controlled by communists. Pilecki continued to resist. In 1947, the government captured him, tortured him, and held a trial before they killed him in 1948. They tried to make people forget him for many years. But after the Berlin Wall fell, his name came back. He had fought against two of the most cruel governments in history. They could kill him, but they could never destroy the truth he left behind

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