| |
Jews Rescued Jews Committee
NEW ON THE AGENDA: RECOGNITION
OF RIGHTEOUS JEWS
Jewish Rescuers
Through
Yad Vashem’s fine “Righteous Among the Nations” project, Israel and the
Jewish People have, since 1963, aptly recognized non-Jews who saved the
lives of Jews during the Holocaust while imperiling themselves.
But
while the deeds of these 19,000 well-deserving non-Jews, who placed the
lives of other human beings before their own well-being during those dark
years in Europe, have been intensely researching, acknowledged and commemorated
over, the Jewish People have largely ignored individual Jews and Jewish
organizations who, during the same period, went beyond the call of duty
to save the lives of fellow Jews. Like the many non-Jews who have been
recognized over the years for their heroism, these Jews knowingly put themselves
in danger to help save their brethren – in many cases doing so even when
they themselves had the opportunity to flee the Nazi persecutions and thus
be saved. These people operated in the same countries and localities as
many of the Righteous Among the Nations, participating and sometimes leading
the rescue operations and putting themselves in the greatest of dangers
as Jews. Many paid for their efforts with their lives.
The stories of three of these
outstanding individuals can exemplify the phenomenon:
-Zerah
Wahrhaftig, working under adverse conditions in Lithuania,
exploited false “visas” to Dutch protectorates in the Caribbean to extract
thousands of Jews via Russia to Japan with the help of the Japanese diplomat
Chiune Sugihara and his Dutch colleague Zwartendijk.
-Tuvya
Beilski built a viable settlement – including public kitchen, medical
clinic, hospital, bakery, flourmill, bathhouse, stables, schools and more
– hidden in the harsh Belarus forest. By the end of the
war, 1200 Jews who escaped from ghettos in the vicinity found refuge in
what became know as “Beilski’s Shtetl.”
-Mussa
Abadi and Odette Abadi-Rosenstock picked up Jewish children in Nice
and Cannes, France, whose parents had already been deported
or were in hiding. With the assistance of the Bishop of Nice Paul Raymond
they found hiding places for the children and provided them with forged
ID and baptismal certificates. 527 children were saved by the Abadis.
A
small number of these rescuers are still alive in Israel and around the
world. Some of them remain reluctant till today to recount their stories.
Their satisfaction remains in the knowledge that through subterfuge, cunning
and bravery they were able to overcome the Germans and their collaborators
and save Jews – in the tens, hundreds and sometimes even in the thousands.
Today, their heroism goes largely unknown and unrecognized. Ironically,
57 years after these events, no framework has yet been established to pay
tribute to these unsung heroes, nor has the subject of Jewish rescuers
been studied in a comprehensive manner by the academic world. Indeed, as
concluded by the eminent Holocaust historian Nechama Tec “While there were
Jews who selflessly rescued others, as a subject of systematic study they
have remained unnoticed.” (“Reflections on Rescuers”, in The Holocaust
and History, ed. M. Berenbaum and A. Peck, Indiana University Press
and US Holocaust Memorial Museum, 1998, paperback 2002. p. 657).
Tec herself asks accusingly, “Why had I overlooked the rescue of Jews by
Jews? Did I think that self-preservation, as a basic drive, would take
precedence over everything else? Historically, Jews have been viewed as
victims, and not as rescuers, not as heroes. Had I unconsciously assimilated
these perceptions? Had I assumed that victim and rescuer were incompatible
roles?” (Ibid.)
In
recognition of the need to break with years of virtual silence on this
issue, a group of Holocaust survivors from Holland, France, Germany and
other countries who were themselves saved by the efforts of Jews, together
with a number of Jewish rescuers and representatives of international Jewish
organizations, established in 2000 in Jerusalem the “Action Committee for
the Recognition of Jewish Rescuers.” Since its founding, the Committee
has been engaged since then in numerous initiatives aimed at bringing this
little-known chapter in Holocaust history to the attention of the general
public These activities include the ongoing compilation of their stories,
contacts with Holocaust commemoration and research institutions, outreach
to the media, meetings with appropriate government and elected representatives
etc. The Committee, an all-volunteer body, has also been the catalyst of
activities at Yad Vashem, the US Holocaust Memorial and other institutions
on the issue of Jewish rescue. Making the lessons of Jewish resistance
– armed and unarmed – relevant for Jewish youth today is a major motivation
behind the activities of the Action Committee.
As
time progresses, fewer and fewer of these rescuers remain alive and all
efforts must be made to unearth their stories before it is too late. The
Action Committee seeks to promote in various ways the commemoration and
awareness of the courageous activities undertaken by Jewish rescuers. This
includes the incorporation of Jewish rescue in school Holocaust studies
curricula – a project which is of particular relevance because many of
the rescuers were themselves school-age youths at the time - along with
greater academic research into this area. It is imperative that these events
become part of the Jewish ethos of courageous resistance to oppression
and persecution.
In
honor of those who risked their lives to save others, the Action Committee
is working to ensure that the heroism shown by Jews who helped their fellow
Jews to survive through a time of unspeakable horror, will find its rightful
place in the vast compendium of tragic events that took place during the
Holocaust. As the surviving rescuers age and pass along, we owe it to them
to act without delay.
The
working Committee,
| Haim Roet (Chair) |
|
Ilana Drukker |
| P.O. Box 8257 |
|
P.O. Box 8504 |
| 91082 Jerusalem, ISRAEL |
|
91084 Jerusalem, ISRAEL |
| Tel. 02-563 1199 |
|
Tel. 02-563 9570 |
| Fax 02-566 2283 |
|
Fax 02-561 1177 |
| Email: roetbgs@netvision.net.il |
|
|
|