How Soviet soldier was sheltered by brave Jersey family during Nazi occupation ...

How Soviet soldier was sheltered by brave Jersey family during Nazi occupation ...
How Soviet soldier was sheltered by brave Jersey family during Nazi occupation ...

Ukrainian soldier 'Tom' Bokejon Akram was sheltered from the Nazis

Ukrainian soldier 'Tom' Bokejon Akram was sheltered from the Nazis

A family has revealed the extraordinary story of 'Britain's Anne Frank' who hid from the Nazis in their home - and even kept a diary.

Phyliss Emily Le Breton and her husband John kept 'Tom' hidden away behind trap doors after he fled his German captors.

Tom - real name Bokejon Akram - was a Ukrainian soldier and school teacher taken as a prisoner of war by the Third Reich.

They took him to the occupied Channel Island of Jersey as a slave but he escaped and was taken in by Mr and Mrs Le Breton.

They risked their lives by hiding him their house where he had trap door escape routes.

He told their five young kids fairy stories and even kept a diary - just like the teenage Anne Frank in Amsterdam.

The family called him 'Tom' and taught him English - partly by reading the Bible with him.

He survived with them for three years and was repatriated to the Ukraine in 1945 by the British.

Although he had promised to keep in touch, the Le Bretons did not hear from him again after 1945. 

It is known that some Soviet prisoners of war were accused by authorities when they returned home of collaboration with the Nazis. 

Others were branded traitors for ignoring Order Number 270, which banned any soldier from surrendering to the enemy.  

The family's story has now emerged as officials at Jersey Heritage try to discover more about him.

Phyliss and Emily's grand-daughter Carolyn Horn, 52, said she was immensely proud of what her family risked to save Tom's life.

Phyliss Emily Le Breton and her husband John kept 'Tom' hidden away behind trap doors after he fled his German captors

Phyliss Emily Le Breton and her husband John kept 'Tom' hidden away behind trap doors after he fled his German captors

Ms Horn, who lives in Cyprus with her husband and three children, said: 'He became a member of the family.

'My aunt said she called him her favourite uncle, as that was how he was known - Uncle Tom.

'My grandmother used to talk about Tom all the time. It just shows what kind people they were. It makes me proud.

'It was a time of crisis and they had German soldiers walking in whenever.

'They still risked their own lives, and the lives of their children, to help someone who they didn't even know and let live in their house as a member of their family.

'There was a little door under the staircase in the house with a trap door behind it - that is how Tom could get from one side of the house to the other.'

Mr and Mrs Le Breton are reported to have said: 'We trusted this man, he was the sort of man we could trust.

'The children loved him and, when he could understand some English, he used to read them fairy stories.'

The Le Bretons risked their lives by hiding him their house (pictured) where he had trap door escape routes. He told their five young kids fairy stories and even kept a diary - just like the teenage Anne Frank in Amsterdam

The Le Bretons risked their lives by hiding him their house (pictured) where he had trap door escape routes. He told their five young kids fairy stories and even kept a diary - just like the teenage Anne Frank in Amsterdam

Tom survived with them for three years and was repatriated to the Ukraine in 1945 by the British. Above: The interior of the family's home

Tom survived with them for three years and was repatriated to the Ukraine in 1945 by the British. Above: The interior of the family's home

Phyliss and Emily's grand-daughter Carolyn Horn, 52, said she was immensely proud of what her family risked to save Tom's life. Above: Ms Horn on her grandmother's lap when she was young

Phyliss and Emily's grand-daughter Carolyn Horn, 52, said she was immensely proud of what her family risked to save Tom's life. Above: Ms Horn on her grandmother's lap when she was young

Tom's journey began in July 1941 when the young Ukrainian soldier and unmarried school teacher defended his country against German attack.

During a two-hour period 12,000 of his colleagues died and Tom, alongside many other Ukrainians, became a PoW.

The German soldiers collected thousands of people and used them as slave labourers to quarry stone and build coastal defences.

Tom then found himself with 2,000 others taken to St Malo in Jersey in July 1942.

He was put into hard labour but ran away and was found in St Mary - by the Le Bretons and their four very young children.

They were nervous and so renamed Bokejon as Tom to reduce the risk of discovery if their kids said anything.

Phyliss and John are reported to have said: 'We trusted this man, he was the sort of man we could trust. The children loved him and, when he could understand some English, he used to read them fairy stories.' Above: The Le Breton family

Phyliss and John are reported to have said: 'We trusted this man, he was the sort of man we could trust. The children loved him and, when he could understand some English, he used to read them fairy stories.' Above: The Le Breton family 

Mr Le Breton was one of 20 Jersey men and women awarded a gold watch by the Soviet government for their courage in helping to shelter Russian and Ukrainian escapees. Above: Mr Le Breton's Jersey ID card

Mr Le Breton was one of 20 Jersey men and women awarded a gold watch by the Soviet government for their courage in helping to shelter Russian and Ukrainian escapees. Above: Mr Le Breton's Jersey ID card 

The wartime ID card of Phyliss Emily Le Breton. In a bid to control the population, the Nazis ordered every person in the occupied Channel Island to be registered under the Registration and Identification of Persons (Jersey) Order, 1940.

The wartime ID card of Phyliss Emily Le Breton. In a bid to control the population, the Nazis ordered every person in the occupied Channel Island to be registered under the Registration and Identification of Persons (Jersey)

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