The Axis Powers
occupied Greece in 1941 during WWII. So began
the Holocaust in Greece and the attempt to exterminate all Greek Jews, including the ancient
Romaniote community and the Greek
Sephardim. Ioanna Tsatsou, who lived in Athens, worked together with
Archbishop Damaskinos to protect Jews in her community from the genocide. She assisted Damaskinos in secretly "baptising" Greek Jews so they could obtain identity cards which said they were Christians. The aim of the baptism was not to convert the Jews. The purpose was only to secure false Christian identity cards for them so they would avoid death. On her own, Tsatsou ran a soup kitchen in
Plaka which fed over 200 people each day. Many of the people they served were unemployed Jews. Her soup kitchen enabled many to survive the war. She also hid Yolanda Baruh and her parents in her home for months during the occupation. In 1943, Tsatsou was interrogated by Italian forces who believed that Damaskinos was receiving money from the Middle East. She was unharmed. Tsatsou wrote a book about her experience during the war, titled
The Sword’s Fierce Edge: A Journal of the Occupation of Greece, 1941-1944. ==Writing==