Tehran Children (book)

In it Dekel reconstructs her father Hannan's journey as a child refugee fleeing Nazi-occupied Poland during World War II.

The book examines the “profound dislocations – geographical, familial, psychological – of the first stages of the German invasion of Poland,” leading to an exodus in which the children endured Soviet Gulags, the “starving regions of Communist Uzbekistan, until they found refuge in Iran."

The Times noted “Tehran Children suggests pathways for further research into a wide range of topics,” including American Jewish leadership during World War II.

"[2] Reviewers have drawn comparisons between the events recorded in Tehran Children and the experience of child refugees around the world through the present day.

The Guardian writes: “what makes Dekel’s study so valuable is not just its assiduous detailing of one family’s fate during the second world war, but how it also makes us reflect on our current era, with its mass migrations of desperate people fleeing conflict and hardship only to meet inflamed nativism and the desire to shift responsibility for their fate from one country on to the next.” [1] Tehran Children is a finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize in 2020.