This multiple award-winning documentary by Emmy Award winner Janet Tobias, acclaimed at a host of international festivals, tells another incredible story of living and surviving in times of persecution and war.
In 1993, New York speleologist Chris Nicola makes a discovery. While exploring a subterranean system in the Ukraine he comes across some highly unusual objects: a woman’s shoe, a house key, a hand-hewn millstone … It takes him nine years to fit all the parts of this mysterious story that happened 60 years back even then together.
In May 1942, as the Nazis advance further and further into Eastern Europe, five Jewish families flee into one of the biggest cave systems in the world: 124 kilometres long with five lakes. 38 Jews –from infant to old man – are now hiding in the darkness. They make themselves at home, build beds, and lamps from old bottles. Some of them frequently risk their lives leaving the cave to get firewood and food from the world above. For almost two years, the cave-dwellers live, work, eat, and sleep right beneath their enemies’ feet. When the Nazis retreat in April 1944, all 38 Jews come out of their cave: mud-encrusted, in ragged clothes, and blinded by the sunlight – but alive.