Pentcho (Príbeh parníka) / Pentcho. The Story of a Steamboat

A story of five hundred people, mostly young Jews, sailing down the Danube and across the sea on a river steamboat in 1940 in an attempt to reach Palestine. The author has drawn on the narratives of passengers on the boat. It is a true story, but one that could happen again any time.

The date is 1940. It is a long voyage to sail 1 868 kilometres from Bratislava to the mouth of the Danube on a rusty river steamboat written off as scrap. It takes even more courage to sail another 2 400 kilometres through the Black Sea from the mouth of the Danube in an attempt to cross the Mediterranean and reach Haifa. Four hundred people crowded on the fifty-metre steamboat Pentcho, set out from Bratislava’s Winter Port. A few days later it took on board a further hundred prisoners from the Dachau concentration camp who wanted to reach what was then British Palestine. It was wartime and the only route still open was a voyage along the international river, the Danube. It was one of the most daring journeys ever made in the history of sailing. An almost-forgotten story, written according to the authentic accounts of the participants. 

Publisher

Number of pages

344

Year

2015

Book category

General Fiction

Issue

1.

Published in

Bratislava

Country

Slovakia

ISBN

978-80-8114-495-0

Book cover

Hardcover

Author