Aracy Moebius de Carvalho (1908 - 2011) was a Brazilian diplomatic clerk who from 1938 through 1942 worked at the Brazilian Consulate in Hamburg, Germany, as Chief of the Passport Section. She helped Jews by handng out visas without the red "Juden" letter that identified them. Her fellow diplomat and assistant-Consul Guimarães Rosa later become her second husband, and certainly the most important Brazilian writer since Machado de Assis. His masterpiece 'The Devil to Pay in the Backlands' (Grande Sertão: Veredas) was dedicated to her. With his help, she saved a great number of Jews from prison and death. The Holocaust, as we know, was a very long epic event, so this TV series presents , in a pictoric soft-focus manner, a side of the tragedy, a touching story, and a must see not only for the plot but also for not ignoring Evil. It's less a production about Jews than about a courageous woman who saves innocent people. Less about racialism than about the science to be yourself in dark periods. A series for reflectioning, for not ignoing the past. The vulnerability of society face to evil. At the very end of each chapter, as it switches into the present now, we see relatiuves of survivors, the Carvalho Jews: their offspring and the idea of how Aracy did not only save those people, but saved generations and future children. Each finale with real-life "Carvalho Jews" honoring their heroine is awe inspiring, certainly what you may call triumph over tragedy. There are several caveats to counteract, however. If Sophie Charlotte is passable in the role of Carvalho, Rodrigo Lombardi is too inexpressive an actor, even somewhat too old for the role of Guimarães Rosa. The sequence in which she drives a car transporting an underground Jew out of Germany is ridiculous: the fugitive is in the backseat of the car, she DOES NOT HAVE diplomatic immunity and the Nazi customs officers merely ask her to open the trunk, they don't even look or supervise the backseat... Come on...