Saving the Jews of Nazi France
As Jews in France tried to flee the Nazi occupation, Harry Bingham, an American diplomat, sped them to safety
- By Peter Eisner
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Europe was careering toward war, but the first few years of Bingham's assignment seem to have been routine enough—other than a chilling visit he paid to Berlin after Hitler rose to power in 1933. In a rare reminiscence recorded by a teenage granddaughter for a school project in the 1980s, Bingham said he and Rose had been repulsed when they "had seen the broken windows where the Jewish stores had all been smashed and there were signs in the restaurants, 'No Jews or Dogs Allowed.' "
In June 1940, the Wehrmacht invaded France by land and air. Bingham sent his pregnant wife and their four children back to the United States, but he himself seemed aloof from the danger. "Two more air raids," he wrote on June 2 as he watched Luftwaffe attacks on Marseille. "Thrilling dive bombing over port...several hangars damaged and two other ships hit." Everyone at the embassy was "very excited about the raids," he noted. Then he headed off to his club for three sets of tennis, only to be disappointed when one match was "called off as my opponent did not show up."
But over the course of a week—as more bombs fell, as he read news of the Germans' overrunning of Belgium and Holland, as refugees poured into Marseille—Bingham's jottings took on a more urgent tone: "Long talk with a Belgian refugee from Brussels who told pitiful story of harrowing experiences during the last days in Brussels and flight to France," he wrote on June 7. "Noise of sirens and diving planes terrorized them...men crying Heil Hitler made human bridges for advancing troops, piles of corpses 5 feet high."
Bingham also worried that "the young Nazis [were] warped and infected with a fanaticism which may make them impossible to deal with for years." He added: "Hitler has all the virtues of the devil—courage, persistence, stamina, cunning, perseverance."
After taking Paris on June 14, 1940, Hitler divided France into an occupied zone and a state to the south that became known for its new capital, Vichy. Tens of thousands of European refugees had been corralled in squalid internment camps throughout southern France; Hitler obliged the Vichy government to hold the refugees until German intelligence units could investigate them. As more refugees streamed into southern France, thousands got as far as Marseille and hundreds lined up at the U.S. Consulate at Place Félix-Baret to beg for documents that would allow them to leave. But the de facto U.S. policy was to stall.
In Washington, James G. McDonald, head of the President's Advisory Committee on Political Refugees, supported pleas from Jewish leaders and others that the United States admit refugees in large numbers. But Breckinridge Long, an assistant secretary of state and head of the Special War Problems Division, opposed that view. Xenophobic and quite possibly anti-Semitic, Long shared a widespread if unfounded fear that German agents would be infiltrated among the visa applicants. In a 1940 memorandum, he wrote that the State Department could delay approvals "by simply advising our consuls to put every obstacle in the way...which would postpone and postpone and postpone the granting of the visas."
As a result, most American consulates in Europe interpreted immigration rules strictly. In Lisbon, "they are very reluctant to grant what they call 'political visas,' that is, visas to refugees who are in danger because of their past political activities," wrote Morris C. Troper, chairman of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, in 1940. "Pretty much the same situation prevails in the American Consulate in Marseille," he went on, "although one of the vice-consuls there, Mr. Hiram Bingham, is most liberal, sympathetic and understanding."
Bingham had, in fact, silently broken ranks. "[I] was getting as many visas as I could to as many people," he told his granddaughter—in a conversation that most family members would hear only years later. "My boss, who was the consul general at that time, said, 'The Germans are going to win the war. Why should we do anything to offend them?' And he didn't want to give any visas to these Jewish people."
The case of Lion Feuchtwanger, Bingham's first rescue operation, had come about because the first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, asked the State Department to issue him an exit visa after Feuchtwanger's editor in the United States informed her of his plight. But while staying at Bingham's villa, the novelist overheard his host arguing over the telephone with his superiors and realized that in hiding him, Bingham had acted on his own. As Bingham searched for a way to get Feuchtwanger safely out of the country, he hid him all through the summer of 1940. By August, an organization called the Emergency Rescue Committee had been established in New York City; once again Feuchtwanger benefited from Eleanor Roosevelt's patronage. In meetings with her, Rescue Committee members developed a list of prominent exiles to be helped. They then sent American journalist Varian Fry to Marseille as their representative. Fry, whose efforts to help some 2,000 refugees escape from France would eventually be well chronicled and widely honored, quickly contacted Bingham.
Bingham issued the novelist a false travel document under the name "Wetcheek," the literal translation of Feuchtwanger from the German. In mid-September 1940 "Wetcheek" and his wife, Marta, left Marseille with several other refugees; he made his way to New York City aboard the SS Excalibur. (His wife followed on a separate ship.) When Feuchtwanger disembarked on October 5, the New York Times reported that he spoke "repeatedly of unidentified American friends who seemed to turn up miraculously in various parts of France to aid him in crucial moments in his flight." (Feuchtwanger settled in the Los Angeles area, where he continued to write. He died in 1958, at the age of 74.)
The State Department, of course, knew precisely who Feuchtwanger's American friends were. Soon after the writer left Marseille, Secretary of State Cordell Hull wired the U.S. Embassy at Vichy: "[T]his Government can not repeat not countenance the activities as reported of...Mr. Fry and other persons, however well-meaning their motives may be, in carrying on activities evading the laws of countries with which the United States maintains friendly relations."
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Comments (16)
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I am a direct decendant of Hiram Bingham. I never met him and neither did my Mother, Grace Marie Bingham, but we are just as proud to be in his family as anyone.
Posted by MItchell C. Hale on November 13,2011 | 08:00 PM
http://hiram7.wordpress.com/2010/03/07/unsung-hero-of-world-war-ii-hiram-bingham-iv/
Posted by David Berger on January 15,2011 | 03:09 PM
I'm a teacher in Kansas and have students who are working on a playlet concerning Hiram Bingham Jr. We all are inspired by his incredibly courageous work in the WWII. My students are trying to contact his children or grandchildren, can anyone help with email addresses.
thanks so much,
Lowell Milken Education Center
Fort Scott, KS.
Norm Conard
Posted by Norm Conard on December 16,2010 | 01:10 PM
The Bingham's are the backbone of this nation. We need the righteous and their deeds for our example. Thank you, sir, for your service and your example. /We honor your righteous memory.
In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. - George Orwell
Posted by MissClarity on June 25,2010 | 01:40 PM
I am just writing to say that I grew up in Salem, CT where the name of the Bingham's was as well known to us as our own. It was not until years later when I was sitting in the very same 18th century farm house mentioned above, that I heard of Hiram Bingham IV's heroic actions. I was so touched to know of the impact he had had on saving so many Jews. These words that I write are to honor his memory, and to say thank you to his family for having shared his story with us on that day. The Bible says that those who bless and honor his people the Jews, shall be themselves blessed and honored.
Posted by Dawn Labbe Jouan on March 30,2010 | 10:10 PM
How beautiful a life that a man though faced with great pressure to conform to the evil attitudes of his time chose instead to do what he knew was right. More than anything, this article presents to me a truth: that although there may be an opinion and a protocol embraced by the majority of society on a particular subject, in the end, it may very well prove to be grossly in error. He was not acknowledged as a hero in his time, but instead proved to be one of those of whom the world is not worthy. I'm very thankful to know the story of Hiram Bingham.
Posted by April Cook on February 2,2010 | 03:51 AM
QUOTE.."A great article. Im writing a report on him and this was verry helpful but im having trouble finding his motivations to do such a task. If anyone knows, could they clear it up with me.Thanks" I am sorry that this writer is having trouble finding Mr. Bingham's movivations to do such a task...?? God bless this wonderful man's memory..to quote our Saviour.." such as you do to the least of these...you do unto me.."
Posted by Ann on February 1,2010 | 02:20 AM
My Grandfather Hiram Bingham's entire life was devoted to doing the right thing at any cost as he even financed much of what he did for others...
Including me...
When I was 14 He and Rose Bingham took me under their wing even though they had little money left to do so...
They taught me so much...
Here's to Hiram and Rose!!!
Posted by Alexander Tucker on November 16,2009 | 01:49 PM
A great article. Im writing a report on him and this was verry helpful but im having trouble finding his motivations to do such a task. If anyone knows, could they clear it up with me.Thanks!
Posted by chris chevalier on May 27,2009 | 08:31 PM
I am a graduate student in history at American University in Washington, and did research and wrote about the subject of American relief organizations in Vichy France. I met Mr. Eisner over the holidays at a party of a mutual friend and we spoke at great length. When I first saw Peter's article in Smithsonian I thought he might have "borrowed" some of my ideas. Not true. Eisner started his research earlier, and followed different lines of inquiry. He even interviewed my former professor (Breitman)during his research. Breitman helped point me in the direction of my research, and knew all along of the overlap in inquiries. Even though both Peter and I met Bingham's daughter (living here in the DC area)during our research - that was the first I herad of Harry Bingham. Breitman never could have predicted that Peter and I would meet at a holiday party. C'est la vie.
Posted by Scott Blair on April 4,2009 | 07:53 PM
Kudos to Peter Eisner for his exceptional article and for getting the story right.
I would like to just note a few things for clarity and since much of this article came from my interviews with Mr. Eisner and my research on my father for a book and film project I want to be sure the record is straight (as things on the internet live on forever).
First, It was Thomas (Golo) Mann Jr. who hid at my father's home (not Heinrich, the brother of Thomas Mann Sr.) while Feuchtwanger was hidden there. Feuchtwanger was disguised as a woman and spirited away from his concentration camp in my father's car with the help of another consul Myles Standish.
Rescuer/journalist Varian Fry was put in contact with my father by a US labor representative (Frank Bohn) who was collaborating with the resistance and my father become a strategic planner in this resistance operation and the underground railroad which rescued perhaps several thousand people (Jews and others, mostly antiNazi intellectuals and activists, but sommon folk who were endangered as well). This network included Andre Breton, the antiStalin Trotskyite Victor Serge, members of the antiNazi and Jewish resistance (including the head of Jewish rescue organization Hicem named Dijours), Social Democrat Fritz Heine, and a French surete official.
It was this network who helped Hannah Arend, Marc Chagall and many others to get out. I know of no evidence that my father helped Arendt directly (he may have).My father was introduced to Jewish resistance leaders by Chagall himself. Dad helped also Jean Moulin (Martel aka "Max"), the French Resistance leader later tortured to death by the Nazi Klaus Barbie, the Butcher of Lyons, and Rabbi Zalman Schachter Shalomi, who became the "Wisdom Chair" at the Naropa Institute and is featured in the film "The Jew in the Lotus" about a spiritual journey to meet the Dalai Lama.
I would welcome inquiries on these subjects at my email address seventhson080754@aol.com
Posted by William Bingham on March 27,2009 | 04:41 PM
It was a most excellent article. I shared it with my study group at church. We were having a lesson on Risk Taking and Hirams actions surely show that. He did what was right in spite of the consequences.
Posted by Carol Wieser on March 14,2009 | 02:53 PM
In reading this story our governments policies make me shudder, that we would turn our backs on the victims of tyrants and then glorifiy these same tyrants later. This makes me feel such shame. These tyrants responsible for horrid and inhuman treatment and extermination of over what 10,000,000 total persons of this earth. There can not be a hell deep enough for those who turned their backs, and no heaven or praise high enough for People of Conscience such as Harry Bingham. Such as He needs to be held high to our children as true heros. But We instead glorify the tyrants of evil. I am reminded of the Ship of Fools incident. All our great patriotic praganda of "Land of the Free and Home of the Brave." taste of ashes after yet another reminder of our government's policy. Rowanda, Darfur, How many more genocides do we sit by watch, with disinterest? There are too few Harry Bingham's in our Capitol Building in Washington DC.
I have lost no one to the Holocaust, nor to any of the genocides since. My family has been here since 1630 in Massachusetts Bay Colony . And the 1600 in the Maryland Colony. But I find my shame for our political stand on Genocide Shameful. Until now, stood proud of my country and our government though I as senior citizen find that our politians give Used Car Salesmen a Bad Name! How do I teach my grandchildren to be proud? Of what a lesser crime than the Tyrant that all claimed they were Never the Tyrant and all were part of the ~~UNDERground~~ FIGHTING THE TYRANTS!! YEAH RIGHT! THEN WHO WERE THE ONES WITH A FINAL SOLUTION?
I was sickened by a recent movie, The Boy in the Stripped Pyjamas.
I felt no compassion for Bruno's family. The screaming mother evoked no sympathy. The sister brought no sense of grief.
Regretfully,
Victoria Hobbs
Posted by Victoria Hobbs on March 13,2009 | 05:25 AM
Hiram Bingham's activities during WWII should serve as a shining example of the value of honoring one's conscience. Not only do the 2,500 human beings he saved owe him a debt of gratitude; his stellar behavior has, and will continue to, save the lives of many, many more in their descendants. The human family at large owes Mr. Bingham a debt of gratitude for modeling for us all this quintessential example of human endeavor: loving our fellow as ourselves.
Posted by Abby on March 12,2009 | 05:42 PM
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