Five Rescuers of Those Threatened by the Holocaust
Righteous good Samaritans came from across the world to save Jews and others from concentration camps
- By Marian Holmes
- Smithsonian.com, February 24, 2009, Subscribe
As persecution of Jews in Europe mounted in the years prior to and during World War II, many people desperately sought visas to escape the Nazi regime. Diplomats, consuls and foreign officials were in a unique position to extend significant help to Jews and other refugees seeking asylum in other countries. But too often the stated policy of foreign governments to stay neutral or restrict immigration left many to perish in Holocaust. As official representatives of their governments, diplomats were obliged to uphold the policies of their countries. Those who acted contrary put themselves at peril. Yet scores of diplomats and others disobeyed their governments by issuing visas, protective papers and other documentation that allowed refugees to escape during the period 1933-1945. Some rescuers established safe houses or hid Jews in their embassies or private residences. When found to be violating their governments' policies, some diplomats were transferred, fired or stripped of their ranks and pensions. When caught by Nazi authorities, they faced imprisonment, deportation to a concentration camp and sometimes murder. But because of their heroic deeds, tens of thousands of lives were saved.
Research assistance and photographs of the featured rescuers has been provided by Eric Saul, author of the upcoming book, Visas for Life: The Righteous and Honorable Diplomats. Saul's many exhibitions on the subject of diplomatic rescues have travelled worldwide.
Chiune Sugihara (1900-1986) was posted to Lithuania, in November 1939 as the Japanese consul general. After the Soviets occupied Lithuania in June 1940 and began their massive arrests, Sugihara realized the urgency of the situation and issued an estimated 6,000 transit visas in July and August mainly to Polish Jews stranded in Lithuania. He granted visas for transit through Kobe, Japan, providing an eastern escape route. From Japan, refugees could go to the United States, Canada, South America, or Australia. About 1,000 Sugihara visa recipients from Lithuania survived the war in Shanghai. Even after his government cabled him to restrict his issuance of visas, he continued to do so at a rapid pace. "There was no place else for them to go," he said later. "If I had waited any longer, even if permission came, it might have been too late." He was transferred to Prague in September 1940 and in 1944 arrested by the Soviets and held 18 months. When he returned to Japan in 1947, he was asked to retire, which he said he believed was for his actions in Lithuania. In 1985, Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority in Jerusalem, honored Sugihara with the title "Righteous Among the Nations" for his aid to refugees in Lithuania.
Charles "Carl " Lutz (1895-1975) was appointed the Swiss vice-consul in Budapest, Hungary, in 1942. After the Nazis occupied Hungary in March 1944 and began sending Jews to death camps, Lutz negotiated with the Nazis and the Hungarian government to allow him to issue protective letters to 8,000 Hungarian Jews for emigration to Palestine. Deliberately misinterpreting the agreement to mean 8,000 families, not individuals, he issued tens of thousands of protective letters. A year earlier, he had helped 10,000 Jewish children emigrate to Palestine from Hungary. He also established 76 safe houses in the Budapest area by calling them Swiss annexes. Working with his wife Gertrud, he was able to liberate Jews from deportation centers and death marches. He is credited with saving 62,000 Jews from the Holocaust. After the war, Lutz was admonished for exceeding his authority in helping Jews, but in 1958 he was rehabilitated by the Swiss government. The Yad Vashem honored him and his wife with the title "Righteous Among the Nations" in 1964 and he has been declared an honorary citizen of the state of Israel.
Feng-Shan Ho (1901-1997) became the Chinese consul general in Vienna soon after Nazi Germany annexed Austria in March 1938. After Kristallnacht—a night in November 1938 when synagogues and Jewish businesses in Germany were ransacked and burned and scores of Jews killed or deported to concentration camps— requests for visas skyrocketed. In order to be released from detention, Jews needed emigration documents. Despite orders from his superior to desist, Ho issued those lifesaving visas, sometimes as many as 900 in one month. One survivor, Hans Kraus, who had waited hours outside the Chinese embassy, thrust his requests into the window of Ho's car; a few days later he received his visa. Eric Goldstaub recalls being granted 20 visas, enough for his entire family to flee Austria. Ho was reassigned in 1940 and went on to serve 40 years as a diplomat. He retired to San Francisco in 1973. It was only upon his death that evidence of his humanitarian assistance to Jews came to light. He was posthumously awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations in 2001 and is known as "China's Schindler."
Varian Fry (1907-1967) was an American journalist when he volunteered in 1940 to head up the Emergency Rescue Committee, a private American relief organization supported by first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. The purpose of the agency was to aid refugees in Nazi-occupied France and ship them out before they could be arrested and sent to concentration camps. Operating from a list that included distinguished artists, writers, scholars, politicians, and labor leaders, Fry set out to provide financial support for the refugees and to secure the necessary papers for their escape. He enlisted the aid of sympathetic diplomats such as Harry Bingham IV and Myles Standish, the U.S. vice consuls in Marseilles. Fry established a French relief organization to use as a cover his operation. For 13 months, from August 1940 to 1941, he and his band of volunteers used bribery, back market funds, forged documents, clandestine mountain routes and any means possible to help rescue more than 2,000 people from France. In 1994, Israel awarded him Righteous Among the Nations status.
Raoul Wallenberg (1912-?), trained as an architect, was appointed first secretary at the Swedish legation in Budapest in July 1944 with the mission to save as many Budapest Jews as possible. The Germans were deporting thousands of Jews each day to the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. Recruited specifically to organize a mission that would rescue Jews from deportations, Wallenberg circumvented many of the usual diplomatic channels. Bribes, extortion and fake documents were commonplace and produced quick results. He redesigned Swedish protective papers, which identified Hungarian Jews as Swedish subjects. The yellow and blue passes with the Swedish coat of arms usually passed muster with the German and Hungarian authorities, who were sometimes bribed as well. Wallenberg established some 30 "Swedish" houses where Jews could take refuge. Increasingly bold, he intercepted a train bound for Auschwitz, distributed his protective passes, and removed Jews from the cattle cars. On numerous occasions, he saved Jews from death marches. When the Soviet army arrived in Budapest in January 1945, he was arrested and eventually disappeared into the Soviet prison system. Though there were rumors of sightings of him and of his execution, there is still nothing conclusive about what happened to him. In just six months, Wallenberg had saved tens of thousands of Jewish lives. He is honored throughout the world as well as a recipient of Israel's Righteous Among the Nations award.
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Comments (31)
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This articles tells about five rescuers who were diplomats or otherwise working with agencies, but the vast majority of Holocaust rescuers were ordinary people who acted independently, such as Miep Gies who tried to save Anne Frank and her family. Thus this article is not representative.... most books on the subject, however, talk about these ordinary citizens, such as "Rescuers" by Drucker or "Heart Has Reasons" by Klempner. Certainly the few diplomats who helped did a great deal, but most of the rescuing was done by ordinary citizens in their respective countries.
Posted by John Souther on July 20,2012 | 10:55 AM
I've lived long enough to know that most people, even when challenged in the extreme, won't put themselves on the line, so what these people did was extraordinary, because it wouldn't have changed their lives if they did nothing, and could have ended their lives if they did anything.
Posted by Mike Pellegrini on July 6,2012 | 11:43 PM
Wonderful article and how blessed were those who were in a position to help the Jews.
Posted by Moira Eicholtz on July 4,2012 | 09:01 PM
i think this is very sad and i would hate for this to happen a gain
Posted by kathy rodriguez on May 15,2012 | 06:47 PM
I am in a relationship with a man who was rescued by the NV group (the Naamloze Vernootschap) in Amsterdam in 1942 when he was around 2 1/2 years old. Not much is known about his actual rescue, other than he was hidden at the Creche across from the Hollandse Schouwberg in Amsterdam, where his parents were awaiting transportation to the camps. Because of the courageous efforts of the young students who made up the NV group, he was eventually hidden in the south of Holland, near Heerlen, Limburg.
The book "The Heart Has Reasons: Holocaust Rescuers and Their Stories of Courage" by Mark Klempner has come the closest to enabling me to picture how he was rescued and his life during the war. I kept feeling that one of the stories might be about him, and that the answers to "by whom" and how he actually got rescued could finally be answered. I recommend this book to those who are interested in Dutch rescue.
Posted by Alice A. on May 31,2011 | 05:39 PM
Also not mentioned is Aristides de Sousa Mendes, who issued against orders from his goverment over 30,000 visas (free of charge) to refugees, half of them jews.
He was later demoted and persecuted by his own govnt.
Posted by João Filipe on January 14,2011 | 12:14 PM
I watched the film Valarian's War on the television the other day and thought what a beautiful soul. How goodness shines out amidst the evil. What a pity he died alone. We should all aspire to be like him and all those who risked their lives to save the jewish people from this hatred, even in this day and age. God Bless all those who played a part in the rescue of the jews and God Bless the jewish people, everywhere.
Posted by Grace O'Connor on August 8,2010 | 04:38 AM
as a teacher and a christian, i am amazed at the bravey of some people and annoyed at the stupidity of others. how can people claim to be religious and not follow the teachings of their religious leaders who said it all when they wrote-do unto others as you would have them do unto you-if we could all follow that golden rule, which is in every religion, what a world we would live in-sharon ivey
Posted by sharon ivey on April 9,2009 | 01:55 PM
It was a pleasure to read your March, 2009 article "Bingham's List. My father and his parents were three of the two thousand people that Hiram Bingham had saved from Nazi Germany's ovens. You did a fine job and helped the world to understand that just because the holocaust occurred almost seventy years ago, the message from that darkest day in our civilization is still pertinent today. People, countries, and governments still have not learned the lessons of the Holocaust. Prejudice and hatred is still rampant in our world today. May be your readers will learn from this article and apply it to their lives today. How do people say that they are religious and believers but do not follow the teachings of their religions?
Posted by lawrence bodner on March 28,2009 | 05:48 PM
what amazing stories.they are truly Rightous Among Nations!
Posted by sanford nathanson on March 26,2009 | 05:26 PM
My father, Harry M. Donaldson, was a consular officer during this same era and in the same general geographic location (Bordeaux, French North Africa and Lisbon) 1940-42. Not sure if he had yet risen to the rank of Vice Consul while in Lisbon. I was only nine at the time and had been evacuated from France in June 1940. Unfortunately, my father died in August 1948, so any historical facts which he might have provided me in later years, were not to be. I do recall some conversations he had with my mother about providing aid to the French Maquis (resistance group) during that time. Whether he was able to provide visas to an extensive number of Jews is unknown to me though I know he worked in the visa section in Lisbon. His boss was Patrick Wiley, American Consul, from North Carolina.
Posted by Henry M. Donaldson, Major USAF Retired on March 16,2009 | 03:29 PM
As my wife read the conclusion of the article, where Harry Bingham's daughter recounts the hymn her family used to sing, she could easily fit those words to the tune of the chorus of Beethoven's "Choral" Symphony, the 9th. I agree with her that if you replace the Bingham family's lyrics for the ones of Frederich von Schiller's "Ode to Joy," which Beethoven adapted, it will ring true for you.
Posted by Free Chin on March 15,2009 | 01:39 AM
Re:March 2009 issue
I,too,am the recipient-owner of a travel document issued by an US consul in France, Lawrence Taylor, who also had the foresight and understanding of the dire straights of the Jews. His document became the underlying means to escape Europe and reach the American shores. It was respected by a German MP colonel who,also defying official policy,issued a "safe order" to my Grandmother and me; a document which I treasure as my Stay-OF-Execution.
I sent a letter to James Baker when he was Secretary of State to see if Consul Taylor could be traced in order to thank him or his family for valor. Nothing was done.
Today, after many experiences including "Normandy" with the 28th Infantry Division and three Purple Hearts, I consider myself the Luckiest 84 year old in the world.
Jean W. Baer
Posted by Jean Baer on March 13,2009 | 11:03 AM
These people were truly brave. They risk all they had mostly their own lives. My grandparents left Belgium before WWI. When they visited after WWII some of their stories were unbelievable. Belgium managed to save about 80% of their Jewish population. I would like to hear about this since the entire county Belgium was under what amounts to house arrest.
Posted by Barbara on March 11,2009 | 02:24 PM
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