About the Author


Dan Rich

Dan Rich, an alumnus of State University of New York at Albany, had a 30-year career in insurance claims before shifting to training roles where he led live and virtual sessions on coverage, estimating, and customer service. He is passionate about NYC sports teams, classic rock music, and community service.


Sabina Spielrein: The Woman Freud and Jung Wrote Out of History

Meet the brilliant Jewish woman who helped invent psychoanalysis, only to be erased by the men who used her ideas.

The Woman Who Hid 100 Jews in Her Attic

Tina Strobos built a secret attic hideout the Nazis never found, stole identity cards, and survived eight Gestapo raids. She lived ten minutes from Anne Frank and never knew.

Arthur Szyk: The Artist Who Fought Hitler with a Paintbrush

His rifle was his paintbrush, and he became one of the most feared weapons in the Allied arsenal.

The Teenage Assassins

Three teenage girls slipped through Nazi-occupied Holland hiding in plain sight, and left a body count behind them.

Jews and Pickles: A New York Love Story

From Eastern European survival food to TikTok sensation, the pickle's journey is really a Jewish story.

The Sobibor Uprising

A quarter million Jews were murdered at Sobibor. But on one October afternoon in 1943, nearly 300 prisoners fought back and ran for their lives.

How The Three Stooges Humiliated Hitler

While Hollywood cowered, the Three Stooges mocked Hitler to his face.

When American and German Soldiers United to Fight the Nazis

In the final days of WWII, one last, improbable battle unfolded inside a medieval castle where American soldiers and German defectors fought side by side against SS troops.

The One-Woman Bomb Squad

She survived the Siege of Leningrad and defused 750 mines by hand. Meet Sofia Golovinskaya, the female Jewish Red Army sapper history nearly erased.

Spies and Saboteurs: The Heroic Women of Winston Churchill’s Secret Army

They helped defeat the Nazis with microfilm tucked into gloves, messages woven into yarn, and intelligence smuggled by bicycle, ski, sewing needle, and hair ribbon.

Jewish Americans Who Were Awarded the Medal of Honor

Nineteen Jewish Americans have received the Medal of Honor. Their stories span centuries—from Civil War scouts to modern warriors in Afghanistan.

From Auschwitz to KISS: The Survivor Who Raised Gene Simmons

Before being KISS’s frontman, Gene Simmons was Chaim Weitz—the son of Holocaust survivor Flóra Klein. This is the story of her courage, sacrifice, and their journey from Auschwitz to arena rock.

“The Marvelous Jew”: Larry Harlow and the Unlikely Birth of Salsa

How did a Jewish kid from Brooklyn become a salsa legend known as “El Judío Maravilloso”?

9 Jewish Inventions: From Mr. Potato Head to the Pregnancy Test

Chances are you didn’t know that Jews were behind all of these ubiquitous inventions.

Maria the Jewess and the Dawn of Chemistry

Shrouded in mystery and brilliance, Maria the Jewess was a trailblazing alchemist whose groundbreaking inventions and enigmatic philosophies bridged the gap between science and mysticism.

Morris Katz: The King of Schlock Art

For over six decades, the eccentric artist crafted thousands of paintings at lightning speed using toilet paper instead of a paintbrush.

The Dressmakers of Auschwitz

For 25 young female Auschwitz prisoners, the key to their survival was crafting exquisite garments for the wives of high-ranking Nazi officers.

The Mighty Atom

How Joe Greenstein, a scrawny Polish Jew, became one of the greatest strongmen of the 20th century.

Zivia Lubetkin: A Leader of the Polish Jewish Underground Who Fought the Nazis

During the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Zivia Lubetkin’s teenage army battled the Nazis for 28 days.

The Happiest Man on Earth

Eddie Jaku’s inspirational story of survival, forgiveness, and love.

Was the DNA Molecule Discovered by a Female Jewish Scientist?

Controversy persists over Rosalind Franklin’s role in unlocking the molecular structure of DNA.

The Two Jewish American Athletes Excluded from 1936 Berlin Olympics

Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller were likely removed due to antisemitism and the desire by the USA and International Olympic Committees to not embarrass Hitler.

Rod Serling’s Moral Fight Against Evil

The creator of The Twilight Zone used his trailblazing series to wrestle with the moral issues of his time.

The Jewish Ukrainian Immigrant who Clothed Elvis, Johnny Cash and Hendrix

Nudie Cohn was a desperate Jewish immigrant child who fled Ukrainian oppression and made his mark with outlandish rhinestone suits.

The Jewish Woman who Revolutionized Emergency Medicine

Dr. Nancy Caroline was a trailblazing Jewish woman who revolutionized emergency medical care in the US and Israel.

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