Product Description
What is the mysterious significance of the "Mark of Barabbas" that appears to offer immunity from disease? Barabbas, released from the cross, devoted his life to expounding on Jewish scriptures and authored The Thirteenth Commandment. Only one known copy survived.
In the 14th Century John of Neuberg, a Catholic priest, pleads with his Jewish friend, Ephraim, to flee from an enraged mob that blames Jews for the Great Mortality that has annihilated a third of Europes population. Ephraim believes that the pestilence will never claim his life and persuades his Christian friend to safeguard precious artifacts that have been under his familys protection since the time of Christ. John of Neuberg agrees. Realizing the import of the documents entrusted to him, he pens Ephraims words in a diary that explain the meaning of The Thirteenth Commandment.
During World War II, Jan Lipski, a young doctor and concentration camp inmate at Auschwitz, had been forced to work with Hans Hoffmann, a Nazi doctor involved in inhuman medical experiments on twin boys. During the last days of the war Lipski helped a group of twin boys to escape certain death before escaping himself with the only copy of The Thirteenth Commandment, passed on through generations of his family as a sacred trust.
Congressman Andrews obtains a copy of the rare sacred text. Will these papers offer a key to the mystery? The answers are illusive. Andrews at last receives what he believes to be a divine message. He travels to the Holy Land where his search continues. Will his journey help save the world from this hideous plague? The race is on to rediscover healing waters that promise a divine cure for mankind.
About the Author
He is the author of The Liberty Crisis and Victim Caught in the Environmental Web, the latter serving as a basis for changes in property law in the State of New Jersey. His fiction works include co-authoring Criminal Intent, all of which are publications of Glenbridge Publishing Ltd.
In 1994 he was presented with two meritorious "Community Service Awards," the first by the New Jersey Senate, and the second from the General Assembly of the State of New Jersey. He is co-editor of The Patriot and serves as a volunteer on the New Jersey rescue squad as an E.M.T. Marvin J. Folkertsma, Jr. is a political science professor who specializes in international relations. He is co-author of Criminal Intent, a novel, and Agony of Survival, a selection of the Jewish Book Club and nominated for the National Jewish Book Awards, both publications of Glenbridge Publishing Ltd. In addition, he is the author of Ideology and Leadership.

