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Raoul Wallenberg: Moses of the North

But Hungary has a long way to go to repair relations with its Jewish citizens

January 19, 2012 12:32
Hungary's Foreign Minister, Janos Martonyi

By

Orlando Radice,

Orlando Radice

2 min read

"Raoul Wallenberg did not save just my world, but many, many worlds. He was our Moses from the North." Thus spoke Annette Lantos, who, together with her late husband, congressman Tom Lantos, was one of the tens of thousands of Jews saved by the Swedish special envoy to Budapest from 1944-1945.

Mrs Lantos, who spoke at a ceremony marking the 100th anniversary of Wallenberg's birth, held in Hungary's National Museum on Tuesday, said that the wartime envoy was "a humanitarian in the midst of hell".

If there is such a thing as a Holocaust hero, Wallenberg was one. Selected to lead a US-backed rescue programme for Hungary's Jews, he was assigned to the Swedish legation in Budapest in 1944 and set about creating safe houses and issuing thousands of visas.

Wallenberg regularly risked his own life, sometimes snatching Jews from trains bound for death camps and regularly sleeping in different houses to avoid capture by the Germans or the Arrow Cross, the Hungarian fascist movement, which proved to be an enthusiastic collaborator with the Nazis.

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