Someday We Will Fly is the story of a Jewish family, as told through the eyes of 15 year old Lillia, as they escape Poland, without Lilla’s mother, and find refuge in Shanghai. Lillia, her young disabled sister, and her heart-broken father learn to fit in as best they can in a foreign culture. The father struggles to find work and the reader is moved to see a once-proud parent reduced to the beaten down hopelessness that settles over him.
Lillia works hard to learn English and to help her little sister whose disabilities and malnutrition weigh on Lillia. Desperate times make people act in ways they might otherwise never consider, as when Lillia takes a job (unbeknownst to her father) as a dancer in a gentlemen’s club.
The reader is impressed by how hard Lillia works to learn Chinese and to achieve in school. She makes friend with Wei, a Chinese boy in her school. Lillia has less supervision in Shanghai than she ever had in Warsaw, but this benefit is greatly overshadowed by the suffering of both the Jewish and the Chinese communities under Japanese occupation.
For a Young Adult novel, there is a pleasantly surprising lack of romance. The ending is a bit contrived and seemed unrealistically optimistic. But it was plausible.
Someday We Will Fly is unique from other WWII historical fictions, covering the little known history of Jewish refugees in Shanghai. The reader learns that 23,000 Jews escaped from Europe and found refuge in Shanghai during the Nazi Regime.
Author Rachel DeWoskin spent much of her life in China, including the past six summers in Shanghai where she researched and wrote this book. She teaches fiction at the University of Chicago, and is an affiliated faculty member in Jewish Studies and East Asian Studies. Her scholarly background is evident in the Author’s Note and the extensive Sources Consulted at the end of this novel.