"Run to the basement!" Grandma shouted, pulling me tightly and leading me out of the apartment. Aunt Giza ran after us and Dad picked up Baba in his arms and ran after us. Mother was the last to leave the apartment, closing the door behind her. We went down the stairs in a panic to the basement of the building. On the way down we saw all the neighbors coming down too. When everyone entered the crowded basement, one of the neighbors closed the heavy door behind us." Thus began the war for five-year-old Gabra, a child in a family of photographers, and changed the life he knew. Together with his father, mother and little sister, Gabra fled to remote areas, to get as far away from the Germans as possible. During the hardships they went through during the war, they had to pretend to be Christians and Muslims, the second world - they changed their names, were imprisoned in a prison, and wandered from place to place. Apart from great luck, two main things saved the family members: Father Moshe's camera and the Law of Besa - an Albanian law of honor that states that every person who needs help must be protected and protected, even at the cost of his life. Kindness, courage and friendship were lights in a world where evil took over - in the dark.