The chapter discusses different ways Jewish people resisted Nazi oppression during the Holocaust. It notes that while armed resistance had little military impact, many Jews resisted through maintaining their dignity and humanity even in dire circumstances. Two examples are given: a boy who refused to eat like an animal in the ghetto, and a girl who secretly attended lessons at her former school while forced to work there. The chapter also describes the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising where 1,000 fighters held off the Germans for 27 days, showing the Jewish spirit could not be defeated.