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'''Rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust''' are those who, during [[World War II]], helped [[Jews]] and others escape the [[the Holocaust|Holocaust]] conducted by [[Nazi Germany]]. A well-known rescuer was [[Oskar Schindler]], one of thousands who have been so recognized.

Since 1963 [[Israel]]'s Holocaust memorial, [[Yad Vashem]], has recognized 24,356<ref>[https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/statistics.html The Righteous Among The Nations]</ref> persons as [[Righteous among the Nations]]. Yad Vashem's Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority, headed by an [[Supreme Court of Israel|Israeli Supreme Court]] justice, recognizes rescuers of Jews as Righteous among the Nations.
{{Righteous Among the Nations}}

== Notable examples by country ==
{{See also|List of Righteous among the Nations by country}}

Holocaust rescuers came from many different countries in the world.

=== Poland ===
{{Main|Rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust}}
Poland had a large Jewish population, and, according to [[Norman Davies]], more Jews were both killed and rescued in Poland than in any other nation: the rescue figure usually being put at between 100,000–150,000.<ref>Norman Davies; ''Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw''; Viking; 2003; p. 200</ref> The memorial at [[Bełżec extermination camp]] commemorates 600,000 murdered Jews and 1,500 Poles who tried to save Jews.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 88</ref> Thousands in Poland have been honored as Righteous Among the Nations by [[Yad Vashem]], constituting the largest national contingent.<ref name="Norman Davies p594">Norman Davies; Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw; Vikiing; 2003; p. 594</ref> Martin Gilbert wrote that "Poles who risked their own lives to save the Jews were indeed the exception. But they could be found throughout Poland, in every town and village."<ref>{{cite book |author=[[Martin Gilbert]] |title=The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust |publisher=Doubleday |year=2002 |pages=88, 109 |url=https://books.google.ca/books?id=HfBmAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=indeed+the+exception |ISBN=038560100X}}</ref>
[[File:Irena Sendlerowa 1942.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Irena Sendler]], member of [[Żegota]], saved 2,500 Jewish children]]

Until the end of Communist domination, much of [[General Government|German-occupied Poland]]'s Holocaust history was hidden behind the veil of the [[Iron Curtain]]. During the World War II Nazi occupation, Poland was the only country where any help provided to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death. Yet [[Polish Righteous among the Nations|6,532 men and women (more than from any other country in the world) have been recognized as rescuers]] by Yad Vashem in Israel.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/statistics.html |title=Statistics – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem |work=yadvashem.org |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100818194708/https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/statistics.html |archivedate=2010-08-18 |df= }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.holocaustforgotten.com/yadvashem.htm|title=Yad Vashem – The Righteous Among Nations|work=holocaustforgotten.com}}</ref>

Poland during the Holocaust of World War II was under total enemy control: initially half of Poland was occupied by the Germans, as the [[General Government]] and [[Reichskommissariat Ostland|Reichskomissariat]]; the other half by the [[Soviet Union|Soviets]], along with the territories of today's [[Belarus]] and [[Ukraine]]. The list of Polish citizens officially recognized as Righteous include 700 names of those who lost their lives while trying to help their Jewish neighbors.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.holocaustforgotten.com/list.htm|title=List of Poles Killed Helping Jews During the Holocaust|work=holocaustforgotten.com}}</ref> There were also groups, such as the Polish ''[[Żegota]]'' organization, that took drastic and dangerous steps to rescue victims. [[Witold Pilecki]], a member of [[Armia Krajowa]], the Polish Home Army, organized a [[resistance movement in Auschwitz]] from 1940, and [[Jan Karski]] tried to spread word of the Holocaust.

When [[Armia Krajowa|AK]] Home Army Intelligence discovered the true fate of transports leaving the Jewish Ghetto, the Council to Aid Jews – ''Rada Pomocy Żydom'' (codename ''[[Zegota|Żegota]]'') – was established in late 1942 in co-operation with church groups. The organization saved thousands. Emphasis was placed on protecting children, as it was nearly impossible to intervene directly against the heavily guarded transports. False papers were prepared, and children were distributed among safe houses and church networks.<ref>Norman Davies; ''Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw''; Vikiing; 2003; p. 200</ref> Two women founded the movement: the Catholic writer and activist [[Zofia Kossak-Szczucka]] and the socialist [[Wanda Krahelska-Filipowicz|Wanda Filipowicz]]. Some of its members had been involved in Polish nationalist movements, which were themselves anti-Jewish, but which became appalled by the barbarity of the Nazi mass murders. In an emotional protest prior to the foundation of the Council, Kossak wrote that Hitler's race murders were a crime about which it was not possible to remain silent. While Polish Catholics might still feel Jews were "enemies of Poland", Kossak wrote that protest was required: "God requires this protest from us... It is required of a Catholic conscience... The blood of the innocent calls for vengeance to the heavens."<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; pp. 120–21</ref>

In the 1948–49 Zegota Case, the Stalin-backed regime established in Poland after the war secretly tried and imprisoned the leading survivors of Zegota as part of a campaign to eliminate and besmirch resistance heroes who might threaten the new regime.<ref>Norman Davies; ''Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw''; Vikiing; 2003; pp. 566, 568</ref>

=== Greece ===
The Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture writes "One cannot forget the repeated initiatives of the head of the Greek Christian Orthodox Metropolitan See of [[Thessaloniki]], Gennadios, against the deportations, and most of all, the official letter of protest signed in [[Athens]] on March 23, 1943, by [[Archbishop Damaskinos]] of the [[Greek Orthodox Church]], along with 27 prominent leaders of cultural, academic and professional organizations. The document, written in a very sharp language, refers to unbreakable bonds between Christian Orthodox and Jews, identifying them jointly as Greeks, without differentiation. It is noteworthy that such a document is unique in the whole of occupied Europe, in character, content and purpose".<ref name="SephardicStudies2">The Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture, p. 2</ref>

The 275 Jews of the island of [[Zakynthos]], however, survived the Holocaust. When the island's mayor, Lucas Κarrer (Λουκάς Καρρέρ), was presented with the German order to hand over a list of Jews, Bishop Chrysostomos returned to the amazed Germans with a list of two names; his and the mayor's. Moreover, the Bishop wrote a letter to Hitler himself stating that the Jews of the island were under his supervision.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://israelyesgr.wordpress.com/2010/01/26/%CE%B7-%CE%B1%CF%80%CE%AF%CF%83%CF%84%CE%B5%CF%85%CF%84%CE%B7-%CE%B9%CF%83%CF%84%CE%BF%CF%81%CE%AF%CE%B1-%CF%84%CF%89%CE%BD-%CE%B5%CE%B2%CF%81%CE%B1%CE%AF%CF%89%CE%BD-%CF%84%CE%B7%CF%82-%CE%B6%CE%B1/|title=Η Απίστευτη Ιστορία των Εβραίων της Ζακύνθου – Μνήμη Ολοκαυτώματος – ΙΣΡΑΗΛ: ΘΥΜΑ ΤΡΟΜΟΚΡΑΤΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΜΜΕ|work=ΙΣΡΑΗΛ: ΘΥΜΑ ΤΡΟΜΟΚΡΑΤΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΜΜΕ}}</ref> In the meantime the island's population hid every member of the Jewish community. When the island was almost levelled by the great [[1953 Ionian earthquake|earthquake of 1953]], the first relief came from the state of Israel, with a message that read "The Jews of Zakynthos have never forgotten their Mayor or their beloved Bishop and what they did for us."<ref name="Zakynthos">[http://www.ushmm.org/greece/eng/zakyntho.htm Zakynthos: The Holocaust in Greece] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070520014306/http://www.ushmm.org/greece/eng/zakyntho.htm |date=2007-05-20 }}, ''United States Holocaust Memorial Museum'', URL accessed April 15, 2006.</ref>

The Jewish community of [[Volos]], one of the most ancient in Greece, has had fewer losses than any other Jewish community in Greece thanks to the timely and dynamic intervention and mobilization of the massive communist-leftist partisan movement of EAM-ELAS ([[National Liberation Front (Greece)]] – [[Greek People's Liberation Army]]) and the successful cooperation of the head of the Greek Christian Orthodox Metropolitan See of [[Demetrias]] Joachim and the chief rabbi of Volos Moses Pesach for the evacuation of Volos from the Jewish people, after the events in a Thessaloniki (displacement of the city's Jews to concentration camps).

[[Princess Alice of Battenberg]] and Greece, who was the wife of [[Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark]] and the mother of [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]] and mother-in-law of [[Queen Elizabeth II]] of the United Kingdom stayed in occupied [[Athens]] during the Second World War, sheltering Jewish refugees, for which she is recognized as "[[Righteous Among the Nations]]" at [[Yad Vashem]].
Although the Germans and Bulgarians<ref name="Glenny508">Glenny, p. 508</ref> deported a great number of Greek Jews, others were successfully hidden by their Greek neighbors.

A touching testimony of 82-year-old Simon Danieli, who traveled from Israel to his birthplace in Veria to thank the descendants of the people who helped him and his family escape Nazi persecution during World War II.

Danieli was 13 in 1942 when his family—father Joseph, a grain merchant, mother Buena, and nine siblings—fled Veria to escape the increasingly frequent atrocities committed by Nazi forces against the city’s Jews. They ended up in a small nearby village in Sykies, where the family was taken in by Giorgos and Panayiota Lanara, who offered them shelter, food and a hiding place in the woods, helped also by a priest, Nestoras Karamitsopoulos.
The Nazis, however, soon stormed Sykies, where around 50 more Jews from Veria had also taken refuge. They questioned the priest about the whereabouts of the Jews, but when Karamitsopoulos refused to answer, they began raiding people’s homes. They found Jews hidden in eight homes, and promptly torched the houses. They also turned their wrath on the priest, torturing him and pulling out his beard, according to Danieli.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite6_1_27/06/2012_449341|title=State of Israel awards three Greeks who helped Jews during WWII – Community – ekathimerini.com|work=ekathimerini.com}}</ref>

=== France ===
[[Père Marie-Benoît]] was a [[French people|French]] [[Order of Friars Minor Capuchin|Capuchin]] priest who helped smuggle approximately 4,000 [[Jew]]s into safety from [[Nazi occupation of France|Nazi-occupied]] [[Southern France]] and subsequently was recognized by [[Yad Vashem]] as a [[Righteous among the Nations]] in 1966. The French town of [[Le Chambon-sur-Lignon]] sheltered several thousand Jews. The Brazilian diplomat [[Luis Martins de Souza Dantas]] illegally issued Brazilian diplomatic visas to hundreds of Jews in France during the [[Vichy France|Vichy Government]], saving them from almost certain death. [[Si Kaddour Benghabrit]], the religious head of the Islamic Center of France, helped more than a thousand Jews by providing forged identity papers to the Jews of Paris during the German occupation of France. He also managed to hide many Jewish families in the rooms of [[Paris Mosque]] as well as in the residencies and women's prayer areas.<ref>Annette Herskovits, The mosque that saved Jews</ref><ref>The Great Mosque of Paris that saved Jews during the Holocaust, Offer Aderet, HAARTZ</ref><ref>Norman H Gershman, Stories of WWII, the missing pages</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://forward.com/articles/149041/muslims-who-helped-save-french-jews/?p=all|title=Muslims Who Helped Save French Jews|date=10 January 2012|work=The Forward}}</ref>

=== Belgium ===
In April 1943, members of the Belgian resistance held up the [[twentieth convoy]] train to Auschwitz, and freed 231 people. Several local governments did all they could to slow down or block the registration processes for Jews they were obliged to perform by the [[Nazi]]s. Many people saved children by hiding them away in private houses and boarding schools. Of the approximately 50,000 Jews in Belgium in 1940, about 25,000 were deported—though only about 1,250 survived. [[Marie Emile Taquet|Marie and Emile Taquet]] sheltered Jewish boys in a residential school or home. The Reverend Bruno Reynders was a Catholic Belgian Monk who defied the Nazis, as he implemented the directive of Pope Pius XII to save the Jews, worked with local orphanages, Catholic Nuns and the Belgian Underground to forge false identities for Jewish children whose parents willingly gave them up in an attempt to spare their lives faced with deportation to the death camps. Pere Bruno risked his life for his values and to save the lives of an estimated 400 Jewish children and is honored as a Righteous Gentile at Yad Vashem.

L'abbé Joseph André is another Catholic priest who secured safe hiding places with Belgian families, orphanages and other institutions for Jewish children and adults.

=== Denmark ===
{{Main|Rescue of the Danish Jews}}
The Jewish community in Denmark remained relatively unaffected by Germany's [[occupation of Denmark]] on April 9, 1940. The Germans allowed the Danish government to remain in office and this cabinet rejected the notion that any "Jewish question" should exist in Denmark. No legislation was passed against Jews and the [[yellow badge]] was not introduced in Denmark. In August 1943, this situation was about to collapse as the Danish government refused to introduce the death penalty as demanded by the Germans following a series of strikes and popular protests. The German empire forced the Danish government to shut down. During these events, German diplomat [[Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz]] tipped off Danish politician [[Hans Hedtoft]] that the Danish Jews would be deported to Germany following the collapse of the Danish government. Hedtoft alerted the [[Danish resistance movement|Danish resistance]] and the Jewish leader C.B. Henriques informed the acting Chief Rabbi [[Marcus Melchior]] in the absence of the Chief Rabbi Max Friediger who had already been arrested as a hostage on August 29, 1943, urging the community to go into hiding in a service on September 29, 1943. During the following weeks, more than 7,200 of Denmark's 8,000 strong Jewish community were ferried to neutral Sweden hidden in fishing boats. A small number of Jews, some 450 in all, were captured by the Germans and shipped to [[Theresienstadt concentration camp|Theresienstadt]]. Danish officials were able to ensure that these prisoners weren't shipped to extermination camps, and Danish [[International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement|Red Cross]] inspections and food packages ensured focus on the Danish Jews. Swedish Count [[Count Folke Bernadotte of Wisborg|Folke Bernadotte]] ensured their [[White Buses|release and transport]] to Denmark in the final days of the war. [[Rescue of the Danish Jews|Denmark]] rescued around 7,200 Jews ''en masse'' in October 1943.

=== Netherlands ===
{{See also|Netherlands in World War II}}

Based on its 1940 population of 9 million the 5,516 Jews rescued in the Netherlands represents the largest per capita number: 1 in 1,700 Dutch was awarded the [[Righteous Among the Nations]] medal.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.volkskrant.nl/dossier-archief/een-op-1800-nederlanders-redde-joden~a3126447/ | title = Nederlanders redde joden | newspaper = De Volkskrant | date = 18 Jan 2012 | first = Arthur | last = Graaff | language = nl | place = [[Netherlands|NL]]}}<br>(Poland: 1 in 3,700; population of 24,300,000 ethnic Poles in 1939)</ref> Notable rescuers include:
* [[Gertruida Wijsmuller-Meier]], who helped save about 10,000 Jewish children from Germany and Austria just before the outbreak of the war ([[Kindertransport]]) and on the last transport ship leaving the Netherlands to the UK in May 1940.
* [[Jan Zwartendijk]], who as a Dutch consular representative in [[Kaunas]], Lithuania, issued exit visas used by between 6,000 and to 10,000 Jewish refugees.
* Those who hid and helped [[Anne Frank]] and her family, like [[Miep Gies]].
* [[Caecilia Loots]], a teacher and antifascist resistance member, who saved Jewish children during the war.<ref name="loots">{{cite web|url=http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/righteous-women/loots.asp|title=Caecilia Antonia Maria Loots - Stories of Women Who Rescued Jews During the Holocaust|publisher=Righteous Among the Nations - Yad Vashem}}</ref>
* [[Marion Pritchard|Marion van Binsbergen]] helped save approximately 150 [[Dutch Jews]], most of them children, throughout the [[Netherlands in World War II|German occupation of the Netherlands]].<ref name="jfr.org">{{cite web|title=Stories of Rescue Mario Pritchard Netherlands|url=https://jfr.org/rescuer-stories/pritchard-marion/|website=The Jewish Foundation for the righteous|accessdate=5 September 2014|ref=4}}</ref><ref name="Keene State College">{{cite web|title=Profiles in Courage|url=http://www.keene.edu/academics/ah/cchgs/collections/own-words/pritchard/|website=Keene State College|access-date=19 June 2018|ref=2}}</ref>
* [[Tina Strobos]], rescued over 100 Jews by hiding them in her house and providing them with forged paperwork to escape the country.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/tina-strobos-dutch-student-who-rescued-100-jews-during-the-holocaust-dies-at-91/2012/02/29/gIQAfalKjR_story.html|title=Tina Strobos, Dutch student who rescued 100 Jews during the Holocaust, dies at 91|last=Langer|first=Emily|date=2012-02-29|work=Washington Post|access-date=2018-04-22|language=en-US|issn=0190-8286}}</ref>
* The participants of the so-called "Amsterdam dock strike" (better known as the [[February strike]], about 30,000 to 50,000 people who on 25 and 26 February 1941 took part in the first strike against persecution of the Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe).
* The village of [[Nieuwlande]] (117 inhabitants) that set up a quota for residents to rescue Jews.

=== Serbia ===
{{Main|The Holocaust in Serbia}}
After the [[Invasion of Yugoslavia]], the country was occupied by Germany and some regions were occupied by Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and Albania. A fascist puppet state called [[Independent State of Croatia]] was created. After a devastating bombing campaign on major Serbian cities, [[Serbia]] was put under direct German command. A puppet regime led by [[Milan Nedić]] was installed. German Army and occupying forces mercilessly persecuted the Jews in Serbia proper, in Hungarian-occupied Vojvodina region, and in the territory held by the Croatian [[Ustashas]]. Serbian Jews who were not transported to concentration camps in Germany were either murdered in Nazi concentration camps within Serbia ([[Sajmište concentration camp|Sajmište]], [[Banjica concentration camp|Banjica]] and [[Crveni Krst concentration camp|Crveni Krst]]), or transported to Croatian-controlled concentration camp [[Jasenovac concentration camp|Jasenovac]] and murdered there. Jews living in Hungarian-occupied regions faced mass executions, the most notorious being the [[Novi Sad raid]] in 1942.

Serbian civilians were involved in saving thousands of Yugoslavian Jews during this period. Miriam Steiner-Aviezer, a researcher into Yugoslavian Jewry and a member of Yad Vashem's Righteous Gentiles committee states: "The Serbs saved many Jews. Contrary to their present image in the world, the Serbs are a friendly, loyal people who will not abandon their neighbors."<ref>''Why is Israel waffling on Kosovo''?, by LARRY DERFNER, and GIL SEDAN</ref> Currently{{when|date=December 2017}}, Yad Vashem recognizes 135 Serbians as Righteous Among Nations, the highest of any Balkan country.<ref>[https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/statistics.html The Righteous Among The Nations] Names and Numbers of Righteous Among the Nations – per Country & Ethnic Origin, as of January 1, 2017, Yad Vashem</ref><ref>http://www.makabijada.com/pravednici/pravednici.htm Association of Yugoslav Jews and Friends</ref>

=== Bulgaria ===
{{Main|Rescue of the Bulgarian Jews}}
[[File:Dimitar Peshev Ivan Minekov2.jpg|thumb|130px|[[Dimitar Peshev]] of [[Bulgaria]]'s [[National Assembly of Bulgaria|National Assembly]] prevented the deportation of Bulgaria's 48,000 Jews.<ref>Official portrait sculpture by [[Ivan Minekov]], [[Council of Europe]] Art Collection.</ref>]]

Bulgaria joined the [[Axis powers]] in March 1941 and took part in the invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece.<ref name="ushmm-b">[https://web.archive.org/web/20120816204424/https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005355 Persecution of Jews in Bulgaria] United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.</ref> The Nazi-allied government of [[Bulgaria]], led by [[Bogdan Filov]], fully and actively assisted in the Holocaust in occupied areas. On Passover 1943, Bulgaria rounded up the great majority of Jews in Greece and Yugoslavia, transported them through Bulgaria, and handed them off to German transport to [[Treblinka]], where almost all were killed. It did not deport its own 50,000 Jewish citizens, after yielding to pressure from the parliament deputy speaker [[Dimitar Peshev]] and the [[Bulgarian Orthodox Church]]. The Nazi-allied government of [[Bulgaria]] deported a higher percentage of Jews (from the areas of Greece and the [[Republic of Macedonia]]) than did the German occupiers in the region.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20040819035802/http://www.people.virginia.edu/~mjl9g/history1.htm]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10006804|title=The Holocaust in Macedonia: Deportation of Monastir Jewry|work=ushmm.org}}</ref> In Bulgarian-occupied Greece, the Bulgarian authorities arrested the majority of the Jewish population on Passover 1943.<ref>[http://www.kis.gr/drama_en.html The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041018141713/http://www.kis.gr/drama_en.html |date=2004-10-18 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.kis.gr/xanthi_en.html The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041018142503/http://www.kis.gr/xanthi_en.html |date=2004-10-18 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.kis.gr/komotini_en.html The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070107035928/http://www.kis.gr/komotini_en.html |date=2007-01-07 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.kis.gr/kabala_en.html The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041018141246/http://www.kis.gr/kabala_en.html |date=2004-10-18 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.kis.gr/alexandroupolis_en.html The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041018115700/http://www.kis.gr/alexandroupolis_en.html |date=2004-10-18 }}</ref> The active participation of Bulgaria in the Holocaust however did not extend to its pre-war territory and after various protests by Archbishop Stefan of Sofia and the interference of [[Dimitar Peshev]], the planned deportation of the Bulgarian Jews (about 50,000) was stopped. The territories of Greece, Macedonia and other nations occupied by Bulgaria during World War II were not considered Bulgarian—they were only administered by Bulgaria, but Bulgaria had no say as to the affairs of these lands. As to the Jews in the sovereign state of Bulgaria, deportation to the concentration camps was denied. Furthermore, Bulgaria was officially thanked by the government of Israel despite being an ally of Nazi Germany.<ref>Dr Michael Bar-Zohar, ''Beyond Hitler's Grasp: The Heroic Rescue of Bulgaria's Jews.'' {{OCLC|716882036}}.</ref>

Dimitar Peshev was the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Bulgaria and Minister of Justice during World War II. He rebelled against the pro-Nazi cabinet and prevented the deportation of Bulgaria’s 48 000 Jews. When it came to its own Jewish citizens, the government faced strong opposition from Peshev and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. Although Peshev had been involved in various anti-Semitic legislation that was passed in Bulgaria during the early years of the War, the government decision to deport Bulgaria’s 48 000 Jews on March 8, 1943 was too much for Peshev. After being informed of the deportation, Peshev tried several times to see Prime Minister Bogdan Filov but the prime minister refused. Next, he went to see Interior Minister [[Petar Gabrovski]] insisting that he cancel the deportations. After much persuasion, Gabrovski finally called the governor of [[Kyustendil]] and instructed him to stop preparations for the Jewish deportations. By 5:30&nbsp;p.m. on March 9, the order was cancelled. After the war, Peshev was charged with anti-Semitism and anti-Communism by the Soviet courts, and sentenced to death. However, after outcry from the Jewish community, his sentence was commuted to 15 years imprisonment, though released after just one year. His deeds went unrecognized after the war, as he lived in poverty in Bulgaria. It was not until 1973 that he was awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations. He died the same year.

=== Portugal ===
Historians have estimated that up to one million refugees fled from the Nazis through Portugal during World War II, an impressive number considering the size of the country’s population at that time (circa 6 million).<ref>Lochery, Neill. "Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light, 1939–45", PublicAffairs; 1 edition (2011), {{ISBN|1-58648-879-1}}</ref> Portugal remained neutral within the overall objectives of the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance; and that astute policy under precarious conditions, made it possible for Portugal to contribute to the rescue of a large number of refugees.<ref>Leite, Joaquim da Costa. "Neutrality by Agreement: Portugal and the British Alliance in World War II." American University, Available online at http://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1305&context=auilr</ref> Portuguese Prime Minister [[António de Oliveira Salazar]] allowed all international Jewish organizations—HIAS, HICEM, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, World Jewish Congress, and Portuguese Jewish relief committees—to establish themselves in Lisbon.<ref name="ReferenceB">Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, Salazar, and the Jews". 2012. {{ISBN|978-9653083875}}</ref> In 1944, in Hungary, risking their lives, the diplomats [[Carlos Sampaio Garrido]] and [[Carlos de Liz-Texeira Branquinho]], coordinating with Salazar, also helped many Jews escape Nazis and their Hungarian allies.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.npl.org/pages/ProgramsExhibits/PressReleases/sl82000.html |title=Spared Lives: The Actions of Three Portuguese Diplomats During World War II |date=August 24, 2000 |work=The Newark Public Library |accessdate=2009-07-28 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070814114724/http://www.npl.org/Pages/ProgramsExhibits/PressReleases/sl82000.html |archivedate=August 14, 2007 |df= }}</ref> In June 1940, when Germany invaded France, Portuguese consul in Bordeaux, [[Aristides de Sousa Mendes]] issued visas, indiscriminately, to a population in panic,<ref>Caught up in the exodus, two British volunteers in the French Ambulance Corps, Dennis Freeman and Douglas Cooper (art historian), captured the drama and agony of this civilian nightmare in “The Road to Bordeaux.”[49] London: Harper, 1941</ref> without asking previous authorizations from Lisbon, as he was supposed to. On June 20, the British Embassy in Lisbon accused the Consul in Bordeaux of improperly charging money for issuing visas and Sousa Mendes was called to Lisbon. The number of visas issued by Sousa Mendes cannot be determined; a 1999 study by the [[Yad Vashem]] historian Dr. Avraham Milgram published by the Shoah Resource Center, International School for Holocaust Studies,<ref>Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, the Consuls, and the Jewish Refugees, 1938–1941". Source: Yad Vashem Studies, vol. XXVII, Jerusalem, 1999, pp. 123–56.</ref> asserts that there is a great difference between reality and the myth created by the generally cited numbers. Sousa Mendes never lost his title as he kept on being listed in the Portuguese Diplomatic Yearbook until 1954 and kept on receiving his full Consul salary, $1,593 Portuguese Escudos,<ref name="ReferenceA">Documents from Arquivo Digital Ministerio das Financas ACMF/Arquivo/DGCP/07/005/003</ref><ref name="badigital.sgmf.pt">[https://web.archive.org/web/20140121042453/http://badigital.sgmf.pt/Arquivo-DGCP--07---005---003/1/]</ref> until the day he died.<ref>Several other sources also mention the monthly allowance that Sousa Mendes received until his death in 1954: A letter that Sousa Mendes wrote to the Portuguese Bar Association, Ordem dos Advogados – Secretaria do Conselho Geral, Lisboa, Cota – Processo nº 10/1931 Date 1946.04.29 where he says that he is receiving a monthly salary of 1,593 Portuguese Escudos. Other source: Wheeler, Douglas L., "And Who Is My Neighbor? A World War II Hero of Conscience for Portugal," Luso-Brazilian Review 26:1 (Summer, 1989): 119–39.</ref> Other Portuguese who deserve further credit for saving Jews during the war are Professor Francisco Paula Leite Pinto and [[Moisés Bensabat Amzalak]]. A devoted Jew, and a Salazar supporter, Amzalak headed the Lisbon Jewish community for more than fifty years (from 1926 until 1978). Leite Pinto, General Manager of the Portuguese railways, together with Amzalak, organized several trains, coming from Berlin and other cities, loaded with refugees.<ref>Testimonial from Professor Baltasar Rebelo de Sousa in OLIVEIRA, Jaime da Costa. «Fotobiografia de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto». No centenário do nascimento de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto, Memória 2, Lisboa, Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, 2003 – {{cite web |url=http://www.delfimsantos.com/textos/JCOliveira_fotobiografia%20de%20Francisco%20de%20Paula%20Leite%20Pinto_2003.pdf |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2014-01-15 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140116131642/http://www.delfimsantos.com/textos/JCOliveira_fotobiografia%20de%20Francisco%20de%20Paula%20Leite%20Pinto_2003.pdf |archivedate=2014-01-16 |df= }}</ref><ref>Testimonial from famous Portuguese historian, Jose Hermano Saraiva – Interview to “Sol” newspaper – {{cite web|url=https://sol.sapo.pt/inicio/Sociedade/Interior.aspx?content_id%3D54865 |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2014-03-19 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203024657/http://sol.sapo.pt/inicio/Sociedade/Interior.aspx?content_id=54865 |archivedate=2013-12-03 |df= }}</ref><ref>«Salazar visto pelos seus próximos», Testemunho de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto, Organização de Jaime Nogueira Pinto. {{ISBN|972-25-0567-X}}, 1993 Bertrand Editora S.A.</ref>

=== Spain ===
In [[Franco's Spain]], several diplomats contributed very actively to rescue Jews during the Holocaust. The two most prominent ones were [[Ángel Sanz Briz]] (the Angel of Budapest), who saved around five thousand Hungarian Jews by providing them Spanish passports, and [[Eduardo Propper de Callejón]], who helped thousands of Jews to escape from France to Spain. Other diplomats with a relevant role were Bernardo Rolland de Miota (consul of Spain at Paris), José Rojas Moreno (Ambassador at Bucharest), Miguel Ángel de Muguiro (diplomat at the Embassy in Budapest), Sebastián Romero Radigales (Consul at Athens), Julio Palencia Tubau, (diplomat at the Embassy in Sofía), Juan Schwartz Díaz-Flores (Consul at Vienna) and José Ruiz Santaella (diplomat at the Embassy in Berlin).

=== Lithuania ===
[[File:Sugihara b.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Chiune Sugihara]], Japanese consul-general in Kaunas, in defiance of Japanese policy, issued thousands of visas to Jews fleeing German-occupied Poland.<ref>{{cite book |author=David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa |year=2000 |page=112 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R_PQLj2D1DQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Jews+in+the+Japanese+mind:+the+history+and+uses+of+a+cultural+stereotype#v=onepage&q&f=false |title=Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype |publisher=Lexington Books |isbn=0-7391-0167-6}} The last diplomat to leave Kaunas, Sugihara continued stamping visas from the open window of his departing train.</ref>]]

[[Chiune Sugihara|Chiune Sempo Sugihara]], Japanese Consul-General in Kaunas, Lithuania, 1939–1940, issued thousands of visas to Jews fleeing [[General Government|German-occupied Poland]] in defiance of explicit orders from the Japanese foreign ministry. The last foreign diplomat to leave Kaunas, Sugihara continued stamping visas from the open window of his departing train. After the war, Sugihara was fired from the Japanese foreign service, ostensibly due to downsizing. In 1985, Sugihara's wife and son received the Righteous Among the Nations honor in Jerusalem, on behalf of the ailing Sugihara, who died in 1986.

=== Albania ===
Unlike many other [[Eastern Europe]]an countries under Nazi occupation, [[Albania]]—which [[Religion in Albania|has a mixed Muslim and Christian population and a tradition of tolerance]]—became a safe haven for Jews.<ref name="www.dw.com">{{cite web|title = Albanians saved Jews from deportation in WWII {{!}} Europe {{!}} DW.COM {{!}} 27.12.2012|url = http://www.dw.com/en/albanians-saved-jews-from-deportation-in-wwii/a-16481404|website = DW.COM|access-date = 2016-01-29|first = Deutsche Welle|last = (www.dw.com)}}</ref> At the end of 1938, Albania was the only remaining country in Europe that still issued visas to Jews through its embassy in Berlin.<ref>{{Cite book|title = A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology and Folk Culture|last = Elsie|first = Robert|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 141}}</ref> Following the Nazi occupation of Albania, the country refused to hand over its small Jewish population to the Germans,<ref name=":0">{{cite book| last=Esposito|first=John L.|year=2004|title=The Islamic World: Abbasid-Historian|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=[[Oxford]]|isbn=978-0-19-516520-3|page=21}}</ref> sometimes even providing Jewish families with forged documents.<ref name="www.dw.com"/> During the war, about 2,000 Jews sought refuge in Albania, and many of them took shelter in rural parts of the country where they were protected by the local population.<ref name="www.dw.com"/> At the end of the war, Albania's Jewish population was greater than it was prior to the war, making it the only country in Europe where the Jewish population increased during [[World War II]].<ref>{{Cite book|title = Give Refuge to the Stranger: The Past, Present, and Future of Sanctuary|last = Rabben|first = Linda|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 114}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hW8pDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA51&dq=Albanian+jews+population+increase&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiSysyP4ePbAhXLqFkKHW1tAqYQ6AEIMDAB#v=onepage&q=Albanian%20jews%20population%20increase&f=false|title=Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe|last=Himka|first=John-Paul|last2=Michlic|first2=Joanna Beata|date=2013|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|year=|isbn=9780803225442|location=Lincoln|pages=51|language=en}}</ref> Out of two thousand Jews in total,<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Righteous|last = Gilbert|first = Martin|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 302}}</ref> only five [[History of the Jews in Albania|Albanian Jews]] perished at the hands of the Nazis.<ref name=":0"/><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J5EuAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA104&dq=Albanian+jews+killed+by+Nazis&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjc48Wo3-PbAhXnxlkKHdqsAr8Q6AEIRTAF#v=onepage&q=Albanian%20jews%20killed%20by%20Nazis&f=false|title=Encyclopedia of the Holocaust|last=Rozett|first=Robert|last2=Spector|first2=Shmuel|date=2013-11-26|publisher=Routledge|year=|isbn=9781135969509|location=|pages=104|language=en}}</ref> They were discovered by the Germans and subsequently deported to [[Pristina]].<ref>{{Cite book|title = Encyclopedia of the Holocaust|last = Rozett|first = Robert|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 104}}</ref>

Between February and March in 1939, [[Zog I of Albania|King Zog I of Albania]] granted asylum to 300 Jewish refugees before being overthrown by the [[Italian Fascism|Italian fascists]] in April the same year. When the Italians requisitioned the Albanian puppet government to expel its Jewish refugees, the Albanian leaders refused, and in the following years, 400 more Jewish refugees found sanctuary in Albania.<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Righteous|last = Gilbert|first = Martin|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 300}}</ref>

Refik Veseli was the first Albanian to be awarded the title [[Righteous Among the Nations]],<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Path of the Righteous: Gentile Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust|last = Mordecal|first = Paldiel|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 336}}</ref> having declared afterwards that betraying the Jews "would have disgraced his village and his family. At minimum his home would be destroyed and his family banished".<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Righteous|last = Gilbert|first = Martin|publisher = |year = |isbn = |location = |page = 523}}</ref> On July 21, 1992, Mihal Lekatari, an [[National Liberation Movement (Albania)|Albanian partisan]] from [[Kavajë]], was recognized as [[Righteous Among the Nations]]. Lekatari is noted for stealing blank identity papers from the municipality of Harizaj and distributing identity papers with Muslim names on them to Jewish refugees.<ref>{{cite web|title = The Righteous Among The Nations|url = http://db.yadvashem.org/righteous/family.html?language=en&itemId=4016073|website = db.yadvashem.org|access-date = 2016-01-30}}</ref> In 1997, Albanian Shyqyri Myrto was honored for rescuing Jews, with the [[Anti-Defamation League]]'s ''Courage to Care Award'' presented to his son, Arian Myrto.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.adl.org/PresRele/HolNa_52/2964_52.asp|title = Adl commemorates holocaust day at city hall; honors albanian rescuer and recognizes jewish survivor|work = adl.org|deadurl = yes|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20060815015631/http://www.adl.org/PresRele/HolNa_52/2964_52.asp|archivedate = 2006-08-15|df = }}</ref> In 2006, a plaque honoring the compassion and courage of Albania during the Holocaust was dedicated in Holocaust Memorial Park in [[Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn|Sheepshead Bay]] in [[Brooklyn]], [[New York (state)|New York]], with the Albanian ambassador to the [[United Nations]] in attendance.{{#tag:ref|
In 1943, the Nazis asked Albanian authorities for a list of the country's Jews. They refused to comply. "Jews were then taken from the cities and hidden in the countryside", Goldfarb explained. "Non-Jewish Albanians would steal identity cards from police stations [for Jews to use]. The underground resistance even warned that anyone who turned in a Jew would be executed." ... "There were actually more Jews in the country after the war than before—thanks to the Albanian traditions of religious tolerance and hospitality."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://forward.com/main/article.php?ref=yaffa200606291257|title=The Forward – News that Matters to American Jews|work=The Forward}}</ref>|group=note}}

During the war, some parts of [[Kosovo]] and [[Republic of Macedonia|Macedonia]] which were occupied by the [[Axis powers]] were annexed to [[Albania]], and an estimated 600 Jews were captured in these territories, and consequently killed.<ref>{{cite web| publisher=[[Haaretz]]| last=Green|first=David B.| date=2 April 2013| title=Jewish Albanians Gain a Foothold| url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/this-day-in-jewish-history/this-day-in-jewish-history-jewish-albanians-gain-a-foothold.premium-1.512974}}</ref>

=== Finland ===
The government of Finland generally refused to deport Finnish Jews to Germany. It has been said that Finnish government officials told German envoys that "Finland has no Jewish Problem". However, the Secret Police [[ValPo]] deported 8 Jews in 1942 who had criminal records. Moreover, it seems highly likely that Finland deported Soviet POWs, among them a number of Jews. The majority of Finnish Jews however, were protected by the government's co-belligerence with Germany. Their men joined the Finnish army and fought on the front.

The most notable Finnish individual involved in aiding the Jews was [[Algoth Niska]] (1888–1954). Niska had been smuggler during the Finnish prohibition, but had run into financial troubles after its end in 1932, so when Albert Amtmann, an Austrian-Jewish acquaintance, expressed his concerns over his people's position in Europe, Niska quickly saw a business opportunity in smuggling Jews out of Germany. The modus operandi was quickly established. Niska would forge Finnish passports and Amtmann would acquire the customers, who with their new passports would able to cross the border out of Germany. All in all, Niska falsified passports for 48 Jews during 1938 and earned 2,5 million Finnish marks ($890,000 or £600,000 in today's money) selling them. Only three of the Jews are known to have survived the Holocaust while twenty were certainly caught. The fates of the other twenty-five are not known. Involved in the operation with Niska and Amtmann were Major Rafael Johannes Kajander, Axel Belewicz and Belewicz's girlfriend Kerttu Ollikainen whose job was to steal the forms on which the passports were forged.<ref name="Laitinen">Jussi Samuli Laitinen; Huijari vai pyhimys? Algoth Niskan osallisuus juutalaisten salakuljettamiseen Keski-Euroopassa vuoden 1938 aikana; Joensuun yliopisto; 2009</ref><ref name="YLE">{{cite web|url=http://yle.fi/aihe/artikkeli/2012/05/23/rikostarinoita-historiasta-salakuljettajien-kuningas |title=Rikostarinoita historiasta: Salakuljettajien kuningas &#124; Elävä arkisto |language=fi|publisher=yle.fi |date= |accessdate=2017-01-27}}</ref>

=== Italy ===
Despite [[Benito Mussolini]]'s close alliance with Hitler, Italy did not adopt Nazism's genocidal ideology towards the Jews. The Nazis were frustrated by the Italian forces' refusal to co-operate in the roundups of Jews, and no Jews were deported from Italy prior to the Nazi occupation of the country following the Italian capitulation in 1943.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; pp. 307–08</ref> In Italian-occupied Croatia, the Nazi envoy [[Siegfried Kasche]] advised Berlin that Italian forces had "apparently been influenced" by Vatican opposition to German anti-Semitism.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.466">Martin Gilbert; The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy; Collins; London; 1986; p. 466</ref> As anti-Axis feeling grew in Italy, the use of [[Vatican Radio]] to broadcast papal disapproval of race murder and anti-Semitism angered the Nazis.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; pp. 308, 311</ref> Mussolini was overthrown in July 1943, and the Nazis moved to occupy Italy, commencing a round-up of Jews. Although thousands were caught, the great majority of Italy's Jews were saved. As in other nations, Catholic networks were heavily engaged in rescue efforts.{{#tag:ref|The situation in Italy was somewhat peculiar in that, notwithstanding Mussolini's proclamation against Jews, most Italians had no personal hatred against them. [[Liliana Picciotto]], the historian of the archive of Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea (Foundation Center for the Contemporary Jewish Documentation) writes that of the 32,300 Jews living in Italy under German occupation, only 8,000 were arrested, whereas 23,500 escaped unharmed. She speculates that the overall percentage of Jews who survived in Italy owed this to the solidarity the persecuted found among the local population.|group=note}}

In [[Fiume]] (northern Italy, today Croatian Rijeka), [[Giovanni Palatucci]], after the promulgation of racial laws against Jews in 1938 and at the beginning of war in 1940, as chief of the Foreigners' Office, forged documents and visas to Jews threatened by deportation. He managed to destroy all documented records of the some 5,000 Jewish refugees living in [[Fiume]], issuing them false papers and providing them with funds. Palatucci then sent the refugees to a large internment camp in southern Italy protected by his uncle, [[Giuseppe Maria Palatucci]], the Catholic Bishop of Campagna. Following the 1943 capitulation of Italy, Fiume was occupied by Nazis. Palatucci remained as head of the police administration without real powers. He continued to clandestinely help Jews and maintain contact with the [[Italian resistance movement|Resistance]], until his activities were discovered by the Gestapo. The Swiss Consul to [[Trieste]], a close friend of his, offered him a safe pass to Switzerland, but Giovanni Palatucci sent his young Jewish fiancée instead. Palatucci was arrested on September 13, 1944. He was condemned to death, but the sentence was later commuted to deportation to Dachau, where he died.

On 19 July 1944, the Gestapo rounded up the nearly 2000 Jewish inhabitants of the island of [[Rhodes]], which had been governed by Italy since 1912. Of the approximately 2,000 Rhodesli Jews who were deported to Auschwitz and elsewhere, only 104 survived.

[[Giorgio Perlasca]], under the guise of Spanish ambassador in [[Budapest]], was able to put under his protection thousands of Jews and non-Jews destined to concentration camps.

[[Martin Gilbert]] wrote that, in October 1943, with the SS occupying Rome and determined to deport the city's 5000 Jews, the Vatican clergy had opened the sanctuaries of the Vatican to all "non-Aryans" in need of rescue in an attempt to forestall the deportation. "Catholic clergy in the city acted with alacrity", wrote Gilbert. "At the Capuchin convent on the Via Siciliano, [[Père Marie-Benoît|Father Benoit]] saved a large numbers of Jews by providing them with false identification papers [...] by the morning of October 16, a total of 4,238 Jews had been given sanctuary in the many monasteries and convents of Rome. A further 477 Jews had been given shelter in the Vatican and its enclaves." Gilbert credited the rapid rescue efforts of the Church with saving over four-fifths of Roman Jews.<ref>[[Martin Gilbert]]; ''The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust''; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 314</ref>

Other Righteous Catholic rescuers in Italy included [[Elisabeth Hesselblad]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2010/07/08/niece-astonished-as-cause-of-sister-katherine-advances/|title=CatholicHerald.co.uk » Niece astonished as Cause of Sister Katherine advances|work=catholicherald.co.uk}}</ref> She and two British women, Mother [[Riccarda Beauchamp Hambrough]] and Sister [[Katherine Flanagan]] have been beatified for reviving the Swedish Bridgettine Order of nuns and hiding scores of Jewish families in their convent.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/british-nuns-who-saved-wartime-jews-on-path-to-sainthood-1988875.html | location=London | work=The Independent | first=Jerome | last=Taylor | date=2 June 2010}}</ref> The churches, monasteries and convents of Assisi formed the [[Assisi Network]] and served as a safe haven for Jews. Gilbert credits the network established by Bishop [[Giuseppe Placido Nicolini]] and Abbott [[Rufino Niccaci]] of the Franciscan Monastery, with saving 300 people.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 323</ref> Other Italian clerics honored by [[Yad Vashem]] include the theology professor Fr [[Giuseppe Girotti]] of Dominican Seminary of Turin, who saved many Jews before being arrested and sent to Dachau where he died in 1945; Fr [[Arrigo Beccari]] who protected around 100 Jewish children in his seminary and among local farmers in the village of Nonantola in Central Italy; and Don [[Gaetano Tantalo]], a parish priest who sheltered a large Jewish family.<ref name="A litany of World War Two saints">[http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-Ed-Contributors/A-litany-of-World-War-Two-saints A litany of World War Two saints]; [[Jerusalem Post]]; 11 April 2008.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/beccari-moreali.html|title=Father Arrigo Beccari and Dr. Giuseppe Moreali – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem|work=yadvashem.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/tantalo.html|title=Don Gaetano Tantalo – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem|work=yadvashem.org}}</ref> Of Italy's 44,500 Jews, some 7,680 were murdered in the Nazi Holocaust.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/italy-background-history.html|title=Italy. Historical Background – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem|work=yadvashem.org}}</ref>

=== Vatican City State ===
{{Main|Rescue of Jews by Catholics during the Holocaust}}

[[File:Castel Gandolfo BW 3.JPG|thumb|The [[Papal Palace of Castel Gandolfo]], the Pope's summer residence, was thrown open to Jews fleeing the Nazi roundups in Northern Italy. In Rome, Pope Pius XII had ordered the city's Catholic institutions to open themselves to the Jews, and 4715 of the 5715 people listed for deportation by the Nazis were sheltered in 150 institutions – 477 in the Vatican itself.]]

In the 1930s, Pope [[Pius XI]] urged Mussolini to ask Hitler to restrain the anti-Semitic actions taking place in Germany.<ref>Paul O'Shea; A Cross Too Heavy; Rosenberg Publishing; p. 230 {{ISBN|978-1-877058-71-4}}</ref> In 1937, the Pope issued the ''[[Mit brennender Sorge]]'' ({{lang-de|"With burning concern"}}) encyclical, in which he asserted the inviolability of human rights.<ref name="Honourable Defeat p.58">Anton Gill; An Honourable Defeat; A History of the German Resistance to Hitler; Heinemann; London; 1994; p. 58</ref>{{#tag:ref|It was written partly in response to the [[Nuremberg Laws]], and condemned racial theories and the mistreatment of people based on race.<ref name="William L. Shirer p234-5">William L. Shirer; The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; Secker & Warburg; London; 1960; pp. 234–35</ref><ref name="britannica3">{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/holocaust/article-236595 |title=Pius XII – Early life and career |publisher=Britannica.com |date= |accessdate=2013-11-06}}</ref><ref name="Pius XI">{{cite web|author=Pius XI |url=http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_14031937_mit-brennender-sorge_en.html |title=Pius XI, Mit Brennender Sorge (14/03/1937) |publisher=Vatican.va |date=1937-03-14 |accessdate=2013-08-18 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130902040902/http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_14031937_mit-brennender-sorge_en.html |archivedate=September 2, 2013 }}</ref>

Pius XI condemned the 1938 ''[[Kristallnacht]]'', sparking mass demonstrations against Catholics and Jews in Munich, where the Bavarian Gauleiter [[Adolf Wagner]] declared: "Every utterance the Pope makes in Rome is an incitement of the Jews throughout the world to agitate against Germany".<ref name="MartinGilbert">Martin Gilbert; ''Kristallnacht – Prelude to Disaster''; HarperPress; 2006; p. 143</ref> The Vatican took steps to find refuge for Jews.<ref name="yadvashem1">[http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/album_auschwitz/index.asp The Auschwitz Album]</ref> Pius XI rejected the Nazi claim of racial superiority, and insisted instead that there was only a single human race.<ref name="MartinGilbert_a">Martin Gilbert; ''Kristallnacht – Prelude to Disaster''; HarperPress; 2006; p. 172</ref>
|group=note}}
; Pius XII
Pope [[Pius XII]] succeeded Pius XI on the eve of war in 1939. He used diplomacy to aid the victims of the Holocaust, and directed the Church to provide discreet aid.<ref name="britannica.com">[http://www.britannica.com/holocaust/article-236599 Encyclopædia Britannica : ''Reflections on the Holocaust'']</ref> His encylicals such as ''[[Summi Pontificatus]]'' and ''[[Mystici corporis]]'' preached against racism—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision".<ref name="vatican.va">[http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xii/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xii_enc_20101939_summi-pontificatus_en.html Pius XII, ''Summi Pontificatus''; 48; October 1939] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130703015921/http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xii/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xii_enc_20101939_summi-pontificatus_en.html |date=July 3, 2013 }}</ref> [[Pope Pius XII's 1942 Christmas address|His 1942 Christmas radio address]] denounced the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of "faultless" people because of their "nationality or race". The Nazis were furious and The [[Reich Security Main Office]], responsible for the deportation of Jews, called him the "mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals".<ref>[[Martin Gilbert]]; ''The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust''; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 308</ref> Pius XII intervened to attempt to block Nazi deportations of Jews in various countries.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070428020823/http://www.britannica.com/holocaust/article-236597]</ref>

Following the capitulation of Italy, Nazi deportations of Jews to death camps began. Pius XII protested at diplomatic levels, while several thousand Jews found refuge in Catholic networks. On 27 June 1943, [[Vatican Radio]] broadcast a papal injunction: "He who makes a distinction between Jews and other men is being unfaithful to God and is in conflict with God's commands".<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.311">Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 311</ref>

When the Nazis came to Rome in search of Jews, the Pope had already days earlier ordered the sanctuaries of the Vatican City be opened to all "non-Aryans" in need of refuge and according to [[Martin Gilbert]], by the morning of October 16, "a total of 477 Jews had been given shelter in the Vatican and its enclaves, while another 4,238 had been given sanctuary in the many monasteries and convents of in Rome. Only 1,015 of Rome's 6,730 Jews were seized that morning".<ref name="The Holocaust pp.622-623">[[Martin Gilbert]]; ''The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy''; Collins; London; 1986; pp. 622–23</ref> Upon receiving news of the roundups on the morning of 16 October, the Pope immediately instructed Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione, to make a protest to the German ambassador. After the meeting, the ambassador gave orders for a halt to the arrests. Earlier, the Pope had helped the Jews of Rome by offering gold towards the 50&nbsp;kg ransom demanded by the Nazis.<ref name="spectator.org">[http://spectator.org/archives/2006/08/18/hitlers-pope/print ''Hitler's Pope?''] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130211000000/http://spectator.org/archives/2006/08/18/hitlers-pope/print |date=February 11, 2013 }}; [[Martin Gilbert]]; The American Spectator; 18/8/06</ref>

Other noted rescuers assisted by Pius were [[Pietro Palazzini]]<ref>{{cite web|author=OCT. 18, 2000 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/10/18/world/pietro-palazzini-88-cardinal-honored-for-holocaust-rescue.html?pagewanted=1 |title=Pietro Palazzini, 88, Cardinal Honored for Holocaust Rescue |publisher=Nytimes.com |date=2000-10-18 |accessdate=2017-01-27}}</ref> [[Giovanni Ferrofino]],<ref name="catholicherald.co.uk">{{cite web|url=http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/features/2011/01/19/ten-catholic-heroes-of-the-holocaust/|title=CatholicHerald.co.uk » Ten Catholic heroes of the Holocaust|work=catholicherald.co.uk}}</ref> [[Giovanni Palatucci]], [[Père Marie-Benoît|Pierre-Marie Benoit]] and others. When Archbishop [[Giovanni Montini]] (later Pope Paul VI) was offered an award for his rescue work by Israel, he said he had only been acting on the orders of Pius XII.<ref name="spectator.org" />

Pius' diplomatic representatives lobbied on behalf of Jews across Europe, including in [[Vichy France]], Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and Slovakia, Germany itself and elsewhere.<ref name="yadvashem1" /><ref name="spectator.org" /><ref name="newoxfordreview.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.newoxfordreview.org/article.jsp?did=1007-marchione |title='Righteous Among the Nations' |publisher=[[New Oxford Review]] |date=1944-04-07 |accessdate=2013-11-06}}</ref><ref name="catholicherald1">{{cite web|url=http://archive.catholicherald.co.uk/article/1st-may-2009/8/how-king-boris-kept-ahead-of-adolf-hitler |title=How King Boris Kept Ahead Of Adolf Hitler |publisher=Catholic Herald Archive |date= |accessdate=2013-11-06}}</ref><ref name="news.va">{{cite news|url=http://www.news.va/en/news/the-papers-of-apostolic-visitor-giuseppe-ramiro-ma |title=The papers of Apostolic Visitor, Giuseppe Ramiro Marcone reveal the Holy See's commitment to helping Jews persecuted by Nazis |publisher=[[News.va]] |date= |accessdate=2013-11-06 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20151021052427/http://www.news.va/en/news/the-papers-of-apostolic-visitor-giuseppe-ramiro-ma |archivedate=October 21, 2015 }}</ref><ref name="Michael Phayer p85">Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust: 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 85</ref> Many papal [[nuncio]]s played important roles in the rescue of Jews, among them [[Giuseppe Burzio]], the Vatican Chargé d'Affaires in Slovakia; [[Fillipo Bernardini]], Nuncio to Switzerland; and [[Angelo Roncalli]], the Nuncio to Turkey.<ref name="Michael Phayer p.83">Michael Phayer; ''The Catholic Church and the Holocaust 1930–1965''; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 83</ref> [[Angelo Rotta]], the wartime Nuncio to Budapest and [[Andrea Cassulo]], the Nuncio to Bucharest have been recognized as Righteous Among the Nations.

Pius directly protested the deportations of Slovakian Jews to the Bratislava government from 1942.<ref name="Churches and Deportation">[http://www.yadvashem.org/odot_pdf/Microsoft%20Word%20-%20697.pdf ''The Churches and the Deportation and Persecution of Jews in Slovakia'']; by Livia Rothkirchen; Vad Yashem.</ref> He made a direct intervention in Hungary to lobby for an end to Jewish deportations in 1944, and on July 4, the Hungarian leader, [[Admiral Horthy]], told Berlin that deportations of Jews must cease, citing protests by the Vatican, the King of Sweden and the Red Cross.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.335">Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 335</ref> The pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic [[Arrow Cross]] seized power in October, and a campaign of murder of the Jews commenced. The neutral powers led a major rescue effort and Pius' representative, Angelo Rotta, took the lead in establishing an "international Ghetto", marked by the emblems of the Swiss, Swedish, Portuguese, Spanish and Vatican legations, and providing shelter for some 25,000 Jews.<ref>[[Martin Gilbert]]; ''The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust''; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 337</ref>

In Rome, some 4,000 Italian Jews and escaped prisoners of war avoided deportation, many of them hidden in safe houses or evacuated from Italy by a resistance group organized by the Irish-born priest and Vatican official [[Hugh O'Flaherty]]. Msgr. O'Flaherty used his political connections to help secure sanctuary for dispossessed Jews.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.terracetalkireland.com/profiles/hugh.htm |title=Profile of Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty |accessdate=14 November 2008 |author=Mary Gaffney |publisher=Terrace Talk |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081023184612/http://www.terracetalkireland.com/profiles/hugh.htm |archivedate=23 October 2008 |df= }}</ref> The wife of the Irish ambassador, [[Delia Murphy]], assisted him.

=== Norway ===
{{Main|Norwegian Righteous among the Nations}}
{{expand section|date=February 2015}}

=== China ===
Between 1933 and 1941, the Chinese city of [[Shanghai]] accepted unconditionally over 18,000 Jewish refugees escaping the Holocaust in Europe, a number greater than those taken in by Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and British India combined during World War II. After 1943, the occupying Nazi-aligned Japanese ghettoised the Jewish refugees in Shanghai into an area known as the [[Shanghai ghetto]]. Many of the Jewish refugees in Shanghai migrated to the United States and [[Israel]] after 1948 due to the [[Chinese Civil War]] (1946–1950). [[Chiune Sugihara]], [[Kiichiro Higuchi]], and [[Fumimaro Konoe]] helped thousands of Jews escape The Holocaust.

=== Japan ===
The Japanese government ensured Jewish safety in China, Japan and Manchuria.<ref>{{cite book | author = David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa | year = 2000 | page = 111 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=R_PQLj2D1DQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Jews+in+the+Japanese+mind:+the+history+and+uses+of+a+cultural+stereotype#v=onepage&q&f=false | title = Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype | publisher = Lexington Books | location = | isbn = 0-7391-0167-6}}</ref> Japanese Army General [[Hideki Tōjō]] received [[Jewish]] refugees in accordance with Japanese national policy and rejected German protest.<ref name="DavidGGoodman113" />

=== Bolivia ===
Between 1938 and 1941, around 20,000 Jews were given visas for Bolivia under an agricultural visa program. Although most moved on to the neighboring countries of Argentina, Uruguay and Chile, some stayed and created a [[Jewish Community in Bolivia]].
<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007824 |title=Refuge in Latin America |publisher=[[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] }}</ref>

== Leaders and diplomats ==
[[File:Raoul Wallenberg.jpg|thumb|upright|Swedish diplomat [[Raoul Wallenberg]] and his colleagues saved as many as 100,000 Hungarian Jews by providing them with diplomatic passes.]]
[[File:Aristides20I.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Aristides de Sousa Mendes]], between June 16 and 23, 1940, frantically issued Portuguese visas, free of charge, to over 30,000 refugees seeking to escape the Nazi terror.]]
[[File:何鳳山.jpg|thumb|upright|Chinese consul in [[Vienna]], [[Ho Feng-Shan]], freely issued thousands of visas to Jews.]]

*[[Per Anger]] – [[Sweden|Swedish]] diplomat in Budapest who originated the idea of issuing provisional passports to Hungarian Jews to protect them from arrest and deportation to camps. Anger collaborated with [[Raoul Wallenberg]] to save the lives of thousands of Jews.
*[[Władysław Bartoszewski]] – [[Poles|Polish]] [[Żegota]] activist.
*The Most Illustrious duke Roberto de Castro Brandão – Brazilian diplomat and nobleman who issued diplomatic visas and passports to Jews in [[Marseilles]], France. He was later deported, along with his daughter Maria-Theresa marchioness Siciliano di Rende and later Lady Pretyman, née de Castro Brandão, and his son, Brazilian [[Ambassador]], current duke Guy Marie de Castro Brandão, as a diplomatic prisoner in the Rheinhotel Dreesen in Bad Godesberg where Hitler used to go regularly. He stayed there until the end of the war and was exchanged with German soldiers imprisoned by the Allies.
*Count [[Folke Bernadotte]] of Wisborg – [[Swedish people|Swedish]] diplomat, who negotiated the release of 27,000 people (a significant number of whom were Jews) to hospitals in Sweden.
*Jacob (Jack) Benardout – British diplomat to [[Dominican Republic]] before and during World War II. Issued numerous Dominican Republic visas to Jews in Germany. Only 16 Jewish families arrived in the Dominican Republic (the other Jews dispersed to countries along the way, e.g. Britain, America) and so created the Jewish community of the Dominican Republic.<ref>[http://benardoutlite.com/Now-Let-us-Praise-Famous-Men benardout]</ref>
*[[Hiram Bingham IV]] – American Vice Consul in [[Marseilles]], France, 1940–1941.
*[[José Castellanos Contreras]] – a [[El Salvador|Salvadorean]] army colonel and diplomat who, while working as El Salvador's [[Consul General]] in [[Geneva, Switzerland|Geneva]] from 1942–45, and in conjunction with George Mantello, helped save at least 13,000 [[Central Europe]]an Jews from Nazi persecution by providing them with false papers of Salvadorean nationality.
*[[Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz]] – German diplomatic attaché in Denmark. Alerted Danish politician [[Hans Hedtoft]] about the imminent German plans deport to Denmark's Jewish community, thus enabling the following [[rescue of the Danish Jews]].
*[[Harald Edelstam]] – Swedish diplomat in Norway who helped to protect and smuggle hundreds of Jews and [[Norwegian resistance movement|Norwegian resistance]] fighters to Sweden.
*[[Gisi Fleischmann]] led the [[Bratislava Working Group]], one of the most important rescue groups, in partnership with Rabbi [[Chaim Michael Dov Weissmandl]]. They successfully negotiated with the Nazis in early 1942 to stop the transports from Slovakia and a few months later, via the Europa plan, to try to stop transports from other parts of Europe. They demanded bombing of the rail lines to Auschwitz and authored/distributed the [[Vrba–Wetzler report|Auschwitz Report]] in 1944.
*[[Frank Foley]] – [[British people|British]] [[Secret Intelligence Service|MI6]] agent undercover as a passport officer in Berlin, saved around 10,000 people by issuing forged passports to Britain and the [[Mandatory Palestine|British Mandate of Palestine]].
*[[Rafael Leónidas Trujillo]] – the Dominican dictator promised to receive 100,000 Jewish refugees into the Dominican Republic in 1938 when Franklin D. Roosevelt organized an international conference in Evian to discuss the persecution of the Jews. Dominican Republic was the only nation accepting Jews immigrants after the conference.<ref name="sosuanews.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.sosuanews.com/index.php?id=1055&article=1|title=Sosúa-News|author=Tainos Webdesign|work=sosuanews.com}}</ref> The DORSA (Dominican Republic Settlement Association) was formed to settle Jews on the northern coast. 5,000 visas were issued, but only 645 European Jews reached the settlement. The refugees were assigned land and cattle and the town of [[Sosúa]] was founded.<ref name="sosuanews.com" /> 5000 dollars in gold from Jewish International in New York were paid for each person taken by the Trujillo.<ref name="sosuanews.com" /> Other refugees settled in the capital Santo Domingo.<ref>https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/sosua.html</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sosuamuseum.org|title=Sosúa Virtual Museum|work=sosuamuseum.org}}</ref>
*[[Albert Göring]] – [[Germans|German]] businessman (and younger brother of leading Nazi [[Hermann Göring]]) who helped Jews and dissidents survive in Germany.
*[[Paul Grüninger]] – [[Swiss (people)|Swiss]] commander of police who provided falsely dated papers to over 3,000 refugees so they could escape Austria following the [[Anschluss]].
[[File:Paul Grüninger vermutlich im Jahr 1939.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Paul Grüninger]], commander of the police of the Canton of St. Gallen in Switzerland, who provided falsely dated papers from late 1938 to autumn 1939 to over 3,000 refugees so they could escape Austria.<ref name="woz-201404">{{cite web|url=http://www.woz.ch/1404/akte-grueninger/der-fluechtlingshelfer-und-die-rueckkehr-der-beamten|title="Akte Grüninger": Der Flüchtlingshelfer und die Rückkehr der Beamten|publisher=[[Die Wochenzeitung WOZ]]|author=Stefan Keller|language=German|date=2014-01-23|accessdate=2015-07-30}}</ref><ref name="yadvashem">{{cite web|url=https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/grueninger.html|title=The Policeman who Lifted the Border Barrier|publisher=[[Yad Vashem]]|author=|language=|date=|accessdate=2015-07-30}}</ref>]]
*[[Kiichiro Higuchi]] – Japanese lieutenant general who saved 20,000 Jewish refugees.<ref>{{cite web | title=Sugihara not the only Japanese to save Jewish lives | publisher = [[Asahi shimbun]] | url = http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201005030206.html |date = 2010-05-04 |accessdate = 2010-10-20}}</ref>
*[[Wilm Hosenfeld]] – German officer who helped pianist [[Wladyslaw Szpilman]], a Polish Jew, among many others.
*[[Seishirō Itagaki]] – [[Ministry of War of Japan|Japanese Army Minister]] who proposed and adopted a Japanese national policy to receive Jewish refugees.<ref name=DavidGGoodman111 />
*[[Lyndon B. Johnson]] – Future [[President of the United States]] who, as a member of the [[United States House of Representatives]] in 1938, helped [[Austria]]n conductor [[Erich Leinsdorf]] gain [[permanent residency]] in the United States. Johnson later helped Jews enter the U.S. through [[Latin America]] and become workers on [[National Youth Administration]] projects in [[Texas]].<ref>Johnson's aid to Leinsdorf is mentioned in {{cite book |last=Caro |first=Robert |title=[[The Path to Power (1982)|The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Path to Power]] |authorlink=Robert Caro |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf |year=1982 |pages=481–82 |isbn=0-394-49973-5}} His aid to Leinsdorf and to the other refugees is mentioned in {{cite book |last=Woods |first=Randall |title=LBJ: Architect of American Ambition |publisher=Free Press |year=2006 |pages=139–40 |isbn=0-684-83458-8}}</ref>
*Prince [[Constantin Karadja]] – Romanian diplomat, who saved over 51,000 Jews from deportation and extermination, as credited by Yad Vashem in 2005.<ref>[http://berlin.mfa.gov.il/mfm/web/main/document.asp?DocumentID=83056&MissionID=88 The Israeli Government's Official Website, by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
*[[Jan Karski]] – [[Poles|Polish]] emissary of [[Armia Krajowa]] to Western Allies and eye-witness of the Holocaust.
*[[Necdet Kent]] – [[Turkish people|Turkish]] Consul General at [[Marseille]], who granted Turkish citizenship to hundreds of Jews. At one point, he entered an Auschwitz-bound train at enormous personal risk to save from deportation 70 Jews, to whom he had granted Turkish citizenship.
*[[Fumimaro Konoe]] – [[Prime Minister of Japan|Japanese Prime Minister]] who adopted a Japanese national policy to receive Jewish refugees.<ref name=DavidGGoodman111>{{cite book | author = David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa | year = 2000 | page = 111 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=R_PQLj2D1DQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Jews+in+the+Japanese+mind:+the+history+and+uses+of+a+cultural+stereotype#v=onepage&q&f=false | title = Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype | publisher = Lexington Books | isbn = 0-7391-0167-6}}</ref>
*[[Zofia Kossak-Szczucka]] – [[Poles|Polish]] founder of Zegota.
*[[Hillel Kook]] (aka Peter Bergson) established a US-based rescue group, which had considerable support in the Congress and Senate. The group's activism was the major factor forcing President Roosevelt to establish the War Refugee Board in January 1944. One of the WRB's important actions was initiation and sponsoring of the Wallenberg mission to Budapest.
*[[Carl Lutz]] – [[Swiss (people)|Swiss]] consul in [[Budapest]], protected tens of thousands of Jews in Hungary.
*[[Luis Martins de Souza Dantas]] – Brazilian in charge of the Brazilian diplomatic mission in France. He granted Brazilian visas to several Jews and other minorities persecuted by the Nazis. He was proclaimed as Righteous among the Nations in 2003.<ref>[https://view.publitas.com/yad-vashem/yv_magazine31/page/1 "The Righteous Among Us", Yad Vashem Magazine]</ref>
*[[George Mantello]] (b. Mandl Gyorgy) – [[El Salvador]]'s honorary consul for Hungary, [[Romania]], and [[Czechoslovakia]] – provided Salvadoran protection papers for thousands of Jews. He spearheaded an unprecedented Swiss grassroots protests and press campaign. It led to Roosevelt, Churchill and other world leaders threatening Hungary's ruler, regent Miklos Horthy, with post-war retribution if the transports don't stop. That ended the deportation of Jews from Hungary to Auschwitz.<ref name="rwsl">Rafael Angel Alfaro Pineda. "[http://www.raoulwallenberg.net/?en/press/el-salvador-schindler-s-list.918.htm El Salvador and Schindler's List: A valid comparison]", originally in ''La Prensa Gráfica'' {{es icon}} April 19, 1994, reproduced in English by the International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation.</ref><ref name="eshh">[http://www.math.dartmouth.edu/~lamperti/holocaust_hero.html El Salvador's Holocaust Hero] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20121210074145/http://math.dartmouth.edu/~lamperti/holocaust_hero.html |date=2012-12-10 }}</ref>
*[[Boris III of Bulgaria]] – King of Bulgaria from 1918–1943 Resisted demands from Hitler to deport the Jews resulting in all 50,000 being spared, Boris died in 1943 after meeting with Hitler.
*[[Paul V. McNutt]] – United States [[High Commissioner of the Philippines|High Commissioner]] of the [[Philippines]], 1937–1939, who facilitated the entry of Jewish refugees into the Philippines.<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web|url=http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/marcuse/classes/233ab/zbaszynmanila/HarrisCysnerZbaszynManila.htm|title=From Zbaszyn to Manila, by Bonnie Harris, 2005|work=ucsb.edu}}</ref>
*[[Helmuth James Graf von Moltke]] – adviser to the [[Third Reich]] on international law; active in [[Kreisau Circle]] resistance group, sent Jews to safe-haven countries.
*[[Delia Murphy]] – wife of Dr. Thomas J. Kiernan, [[Ireland|Irish]] minister in Rome 1941–1946, who worked with [[Hugh O'Flaherty]] and was part of the network that saved the lives of POWs and Jews in the hands of the Gestapo.<ref>[http://www.westernpeople.com/news/story.asp?j=33591 Western People: Roundfort cabaret honours legendary Delia Murphy<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011072116/http://www.westernpeople.com/news/story.asp?j=33591 |date=2007-10-11 }}</ref>
* [[Jean-Marie Musy]] toward end of the war negotiated with Himmler on behalf of [[Recha Sternbuch]] – to rescue large numbers of Jews in the concentration camps
*[[Giovanni Palatucci]] – [[Italian people|Italian]] police official who saved several thousand.
*[[Giorgio Perlasca]] – [[Italian people|Italian]]. When [[Ángel Sanz Briz]] was ordered to leave Hungary, he falsely claimed to be his substitute and saved some thousands more Jews.
*[[Dimitar Peshev]] – Deputy Speaker of the Bulgarian Parliament, played a major role in rescuing Bulgaria's 48 000 Jews, the entire Jewish population in Bulgaria at the time.
*[[Frits Philips]] – Dutch industrialist who saved 382 Jews by insisting to the Nazis that they were indispensable employees of [[Philips]].
*[[Witold Pilecki]] – the only person who volunteered to be imprisoned in [[Auschwitz]], organized a resistance inside the camp and as a member of [[Armia Krajowa]] sent the first reports on the camp atrocities to the [[Polish Government in Exile]], from where they were passed to the rest of the [[Allies of World War II|Western Allies]].
*[[Karl Plagge]] – a major in the [[German Army (Wehrmacht)|''Wehrmacht Heer'']] who issued work permits in order to save almost 1,000 Jews (see ''The Search for Major Plagge: The Nazi Who Saved Jews'', by Michael Good)
*[[Enver Hoxha]] – Led the Resistance against the German and Italians in Albania. Hoxha refused that the Germans or collaborationists deport a single Jew, therefore Albania was the only country in Europe to have an increased Jewish population after the war.
*[[Mehmet Shehu]] – a resistance fighter in Albania who allowed Jews to enter Albania, and refused to hand the Jews over to The Germans, during the occupation
*[[Eduardo Propper de Callejón]] – First Secretary in the Spanish embassy in Paris who stamped and signed passports almost non-stop for four days in 1940 to let Jewish refugees escape to Spain and Portugal.
*[[Traian Popovici]] – [[Romania]]n mayor of Cernăuţi ([[Chernivtsi]]) who saved 20,000 Jews of [[Bukovina]].
*[[Manuel L. Quezon]] – President of the [[Commonwealth of the Philippines]], 1935–1941, assisted in resettling Jewish refugees on the island of [[Mindanao]].<ref name=autogenerated1 />
*Florencio Rivas – Consul General of [[Uruguay]] in Germany, who allegedly hid one hundred and fifty Jews during [[Kristallnacht]] and later provided them with passports.<ref>[http://www.elreloj.com/article.php?id=1786 Diplomáticos que salvaron judíos durante el Holocausto | Especiales | Israel en Tiempo de Noticias. Judaismo y Pueblo Judio a diario. El Reloj.com<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050206101346/http://www.elreloj.com/article.php?id=1786 |date=2005-02-06 }}</ref>
*[[Gilberto Bosques Saldívar]] – General Consul of [[Mexico]] in [[Marseilles]], France. For two years, he issued Mexican visas to around 40,000 Jews, Spaniards and political refugees, allowing them to escape to Mexico and other countries. He was imprisoned by the Nazis in 1943 and released to Mexico in 1944.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-beliefs1-2008dec01,0,4655284.story|title='Mexican Schindler' honored|work=latimes}}</ref>
*[[Ángel Sanz Briz]] – [[Spanish people|Spanish]] consul in Hungary. Together with [[Giorgio Perlasca]], he saved more than 5,000 Jews in Budapest by issuing Spanish passports to them.
*[[Abdol-Hossein Sardari]] – Head of Consular affairs at the Iranian Embassy in Paris. He saved many Iranian Jews and gave 500 blank Iranian passports to an acquaintance of his, to be used by non-Iranian Jews in France.<ref>[http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/antisemitism/voices/transcript/?content=20120607 ''Voices on Antisemitism'' Interview with Fariborz Mokhtari] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120705054452/http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/antisemitism/voices/transcript/?content=20120607 |date=2012-07-05 }} from the [[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum]]</ref>
*[[Oskar Schindler]] – [[Germans|German]] businessman whose efforts to save his 1,200 Jewish workers were recounted in the book ''Schindler's Ark'' and the film ''[[Schindler's List]]''.
* Rabbi [[Solomon Schonfeld]] set up a Uk-based rescue committee and rescued many thousands of Jews.
*[[Eduard Schulte]] – German industrialist, the first to inform the Allies about the mass extermination of Jews.
*[[Irena Sendler]] – [[Poles|Polish]] head of [[Zegota]] children's department who saved 2,500 Jewish children.
*[[Feng-Shan Ho|Ho Feng Shan]] – Chinese Consul in [[Vienna]] who freely issued visas to Jews.
*[[Henryk Slawik]] – [[Poles|Polish]] diplomat who saved 5,000–10,000 people in Budapest, Hungary.
*[[Aristides de Sousa Mendes]] – [[Portuguese people|Portuguese]] diplomat in [[Bordeaux]], who signed about 30,000 visas to help Jews and persecuted minorities to escape the [[Nazism|Nazis]] and [[The Holocaust]].
* [[Recha Sternbuch]] rescued large numbers of Jews with the help of her husband Yitzchak by smuggling them into Switzerland from Austria, by distributing protection papers, by negotiating with Himmler with help of [[Jean-Marie Musy]] to save Jews in the concentration camps as the Germans were retreating, and by rescuing the Jews who arrived to Bergen-Belsen by train from Hungary.
*[[Chiune Sugihara]] – [[Japanese people|Japanese]] consul to Lithuania, 2,140 (mostly Polish) Jews and an unknown number of additional family members were saved by passports, many unauthorized, provided by him in 1940.
*[[Hideki Tōjō]] – [[General]] and [[Prime Minister]] of Japan who received [[Jewish]] refugees in Manchuria and rejected German protest.<ref name=DavidGGoodman113>{{cite book | author = David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa | year = 2000 | page = 113 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=R_PQLj2D1DQC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Jews+in+the+Japanese+mind:+the+history+and+uses+of+a+cultural+stereotype#v=onepage&q&f=false | title = Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype | publisher = Lexington Books | location = | isbn = 0-7391-0167-6}}</ref>
*[[Selâhattin Ülkümen]] – [[Turkish people|Turkish]] diplomat who saved the lives of some 42 Jewish Turkish families, more than 200 persons, among a Jewish community of some 2000 after the Germans occupied the island of [[Rhodes]] in 1944.
*[[Raoul Wallenberg]] – [[Swedish people|Swedish]] diplomat. Wallenberg saved the lives of tens of thousands of Jews condemned to certain death by the Nazis during World War II. He disappeared in January 1945 after being imprisoned by the Soviet troops who took control of Budapest.
*[[Nicholas Winton|Sir Nicholas Winton]] – [[British people|British]] stockbroker who organized the Czech [[Kindertransport]] which sent 669 children (most of them Jewish) to foster parents ln England and Sweden from [[Czechoslovakia]] and Austria after [[Kristallnacht]]. Sir Nicholas was nominated for the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/950403.html|title=Israel News – Haaretz Israeli News source|work=haaretz.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.just-powell.co.uk/winton|title=Winton's Children – Index Page|work=just-powell.co.uk}}</ref>
*[[Namik Kemal Yolga]] – A Vice-Consul at the [[Turkish people|Turkish]] Embassy in Paris who saved numerous Turkish Jews from deportation.
*[[Guelfo Zamboni]] – [[Consul General]] at [[Thessaloniki]] who gave false papers to save the lives of over 300 Jews residing there.
*Raymond Geist – [[Consul General]] at the [[Embassy of the United States, Berlin|American embassy]] in Berlin. While he was posted in Berlin from 1929 to 1939 he personally intervened with Nazi officials to save those (German Jews as well as opponents of the Nazi regime), who were under the threat of being imprisoned in concentration camps and issued more than 50,000 visas to save their lives. According to the TV series [[Genius (U.S. TV series)|Genius]], he was the one who issued visas to [[Albert Einstein]] and his family even when he was under orders from [[J. Edgar Hoover]], who was at that time the Director of the [[FBI]] to not to give the visas till [[Albert Einstein]] signed a declaration confirming that he was not a member of the [[Communist Party]]. He was awarded the Order of Merit by the [[German Federal Republic]] in 1954.<ref>https://www.earnthenecklace.com/raymond-geist-wiki-american-consul-general-berlin-genius-tv-series/</ref>

== Religious figures ==
{{See also|Rescue of Jews by Catholics during the Holocaust}}

=== Catholic officials ===
*[[Pope Pius XII]], preached against racism in encyclicals like [[Summi Pontificatus]]. Used [[Vatican Radio]] to denounced race murders and anti-Semitism.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.311" /> Directly lobbied Axis officials to stop Jewish deportations.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.335" /> Opened the sanctuaries of the Vatican to Rome's Jews during the Nazi roundup.<ref name="The Holocaust pp.622-623" />
*[[Monsignor]] [[Hugh O'Flaherty]] [[CBE]] – [[Irish people|Irish]] Catholic priest who saved more than 6,500 Allied soldiers and Jews;<ref>[http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/vaticans-scarlet-pimpernel-honoured-28895222.html ''Vatican's 'Scarlet Pimpernel' honoured'']; Majella O'Sullivan Irish Independent; 12 November 2012</ref> known as the "Scarlet Pimpernel of the Vatican". Retold in the film [[The Scarlet and the Black]].
*[[Fillipo Bernardini]], papal nuncio to Switzerland.<ref name="Michael Phayer p.83" />
*[[Giuseppe Burzio]], the Vatican Chargé d'Affaires in Slovakia.<ref name="Michael Phayer p.83" /> Protested the anti-Semitism and totalitarianism of the Tiso regime.<ref name="Churches and Deportation" /> Burzio advised Rome of the deteriorating situation for Jews in the Nazi puppet state, sparking Vatican protests on behalf of Jews.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=aZTD96Upq9AC&pg=PA87&lpg=PA87&dq=giuseppe+burzio&source=bl&ots=sxpkE5-wbc&sig=B9EQ_jktNFZFHPfJSFDbil3ov1k&hl=en&sa=X&ei=nYqTUdbqFMnniAfEroHoDQ&ved=0CHAQ6AEwDg#v=onepage&q=giuseppe%20burzio&f=false Phayer, The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965, p. 88]</ref>
*[[Angelo Roncalli]], the nuncio to Turkey saved a number of Croatian, Bulgarian and Hungarian Jews by assisting their migration to Palestine. Roncalli succeeded Pius XII as Pope John XXIII, and always said that he had been acting on the orders of Pius XII in his actions to rescue Jews.<ref name="Michael Phayer p86">Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust: 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 86</ref>
*[[Andrea Cassulo]], papal nuncio in Romania.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|0-385-60100-X}}; pp.&nbsp;206–07</ref> Appealed directly to Marshall Antonescu to limit the deportations of Jews to Nazi concentration camps planned for the summer of 1942.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|0-385-60100-X}}; p. 207</ref>
*[[Cardinal Gerlier]] of France refused to hand over Jewish children being sheltered in Catholic homes. In September 1942, Eight Jesuits were arrested for sheltering hundreds of children on Jesuit properties, and Pius XII's Secretary of State, Cardinal Maglione protested to the Vichy Ambassador.<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy; Collins; London; 1986; p. 451</ref>
*[[Giuseppe Marcone]], apostolic visitor to Croatia, lobbied Croat regime, saved 1000 Jewish partners in mixed marriages.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.203">Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|0-385-60100-X}}; p. 203</ref>
*Archbishop [[Aloysius Stepinac]] of Zagreb, condemned Croat atrocities against both Serbs and Jews, and himself saved a group of Jews.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.203" /> He declared publicly in the Spring of 1942 that it was "forbidden to exterminate Gypsies and Jews because they are said to belong to an inferior race".<ref name="Michael Phayer p85" />
*Bishop [[Pavel Gojdic]] protested the persecution of Slovak Jews. Gojdic was beatified by the Church and recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/gojdic.html|title=Bishop Pavel Gojdic – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem|work=yadvashem.org}}</ref>
*[[Angelo Rotta]], papal nuncio to Hungary. Actively protested Hungary's mistreatment of the Jews, and helped persuade Pope Pius XII to lobby the Hungarian leader [[Admiral Horthy]] to stop their deportation.<ref name="wallenberg.hu">{{cite web|url=http://wallenberg.hu/en/raoul-wallenberg/rescuers/diplomats.html|title=Raoul Wallenberg – Diplomats|work=wallenberg.hu}}</ref> He issued protective passports for Jews and 15,000 safe conduct passes – the nunciature sheltered some 3000 Jews in safe houses.<ref name="wallenberg.hu" /> An "International Ghetto" was established, including more than 40 safe houses marked by the Vatican and other national emblems. 25,000 Jews found refuge in these safe houses. Elsewhere in the city, Catholic institutions hid several thousand more Jewish people.<ref>[http://spectator.org/archives/2006/08/18/hitlers-pope/print ''Hitler's Pope?''] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130211000000/http://spectator.org/archives/2006/08/18/hitlers-pope/print |date=February 11, 2013 }}; by Sir [[Martin Gilbert]], The American Spectator.</ref>
*[[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Utrecht|Archbishop]] [[Johannes de Jong]], later [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|Cardinal]], of [[Utrecht (city)|Utrecht]], Netherlands, who drew up together with [[Titus Brandsma]] O.Carm. († Dachau, 1942) a letter in which he called for all Catholics to assist persecuted Jews, and in which he openly condemned the Nazi German ''"deportation of our Jewish fellow citizens"'' (From: ''Herderlijk Schrijven'', read from all [[pulpit]]s on Sunday 26 January 1942).
*Archbishop [[Jules-Géraud Saliège]] of Toulouse – lead a number of French bishops (including [[Pierre-Marie Théas|Monseigneur Théas]], [[Bishop of Montauban]], [[:fr:Jean Delay (évêque)|Monseigneur Delay]], [[Bishop of Marseilles]], [[Cardinal Gerlier]], [[Archbishop of Lyon]], [[Edmund Vansteenberghe|Monseigneur Vansteenberghe]] of Bayonne and [[Jean Moussaron|Monseigneur Moussaron]], [[Archbishop of Albi]] – in denouncing roundups and mistreatment of Jews in France, spurring greater resistance.<ref name="Martin Gilbert p.230">Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 230</ref>
*[[Père Marie-Benoît]], Capuchin monk who saved many Jews in Marseille and later in Rome where he became known among the Jewish community as "father of the Jews".<ref name="A litany of World War Two saints" />
*Mother [[Matylda Getter]]'s [[Franciscan Sisters of the Family of Mary]] sheltered Jewish children escaping the [[Warsaw Ghetto]].<ref>Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; {{ISBN|038560100X}}; p. 114</ref> Getter's convent rescued more than 750.<ref name="Michael Phayer p.117">Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; pp. 117–</ref>
*[[Alfred Delp]] S.J., a Jesuit priest who helped Jews escape to Switzerland while rector of St. Georg Church in suburban [[Munich]]; also involved with the [[Kreisau Circle]]. Executed February 2, 1945 in Berlin.
*[[Rufino Niccacci]], a [[Franciscan]] friar and priest who sheltered Jewish refugees in [[Assisi]], Italy, from September 1943 through June 1944.
*[[Maximilian Kolbe]] – [[Poles|Polish]] [[Conventual Franciscans|Conventual Franciscan]] friar. During the Second World War, in the friary, Kolbe provided shelter to people from [[Greater Poland]], including 2,000 Jews. He was also active as a radio amateur, vilifying Nazi activities through his reports.
*[[Bernhard Lichtenberg]] – [[Germans|German]] [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] [[priest]] at Berlin's Cathedral. Sent to Dachau because he prayed for Jews at Evening Prayer.
*[[Sára Salkaházi]] – a Hungarian Roman Catholic nun who sheltered approximately 100 Jews in Budapest.
* [[Margit Slachta]], of the [[Sisters of Social Service|Hungarian Social Service Sisterhood]], went to Rome to encourage papal action against the Jewish persecutions.<ref name="http">{{cite web|url=http://wallenberg.hu/ |title=Wallenberg Emblekbizottsag |publisher=Wallenberg.hu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-18}}</ref> In Hungary, she had sheltered the persecuted and protested forced labour and antisemitism.<ref name="http" /> In 1944, Pius appealed directly to the Hungarian government to halt the deportation of the Jews of Hungary. The Sisters of Social Service, nuns who saved thousands of [[Hungary|Hungarian]] Jews; included [[Sister Sara Salkahazi]], recognized by [[Yad Vashem]] as well as [[beatified]].

=== Others ===
*[[Archbishop Damaskinos]] – Archbishop of [[Athens]] during the German occupation. He formally protested the deportation of Jews and quietly ordered churches under his jurisdiction to issue fake Christian baptismal certificates to Jews fleeing the Nazis. Thousands of [[Greek Jews]] in and around Athens were thus able to claim that they were Christian and were thus saved.
*[[Archbishop Stefan of Sofia]] – Bishop of [[Sofia, Bulgaria|Sofia]] and [[Exarch]] of Bulgaria, actively supported [[Dimitar Peshev]]'s pressure against the Bulgarian government to cancel the deportation of the 48,000 Bulgarian Jews.
* [[Dietrich Bonhoeffer]] – a German Lutheran pastor who joined the [[Abwehr]] (a German military intelligence organization) which was also the center of the anti-Hitler resistance, and was involved in operations to help German Jews escape to Switzerland. Arrested by the Nazis, he was hanged on April 5, 1945, not long before the war ended.
*Metropolitan [[Chrysostomos of Zakynthos|Bishop Chrysostomos]] of [[Zakynthos]],<ref>[http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/greece/greece.pdf The Holocaust in Greece<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130827092907/http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/greece/greece.pdf |date=2013-08-27 }}</ref> who, when ordered by the [[Axis powers of World War II|Axis]] occupying forces to submit a list of all Jews on the [[Zakynthos|island]], submitted a document bearing just two names: his own and the mayor's. [[History of the Jews in Greece#World War II and the Holocaust|Consequently, all 275 Zante Jews were saved]].
*[[Omelyan Kovch]] – [[Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church|Ukrainian Greek Catholic]] priest who was deported to [[Majdanek]] for helping thousands of Jews. He was [[canonize]]d by [[Pope John Paul II]]<ref>[[:uk:Ковч Омелян]]</ref>
*[[Dimitar Peshev]] was the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Bulgaria and Minister of Justice (1935–1936), before World War II. He rebelled against the pro-Nazi cabinet and prevented the deportation of Bulgaria's 48,000 Jews, and was bestowed the title of "[[Righteous Among the Nations]]".
*[[Leopold Socha]] was a Polish sewage inspector in the city of Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine). During the Holocaust, Socha used his knowledge of the city's sewage system to shelter a group of Jews from Nazi Germans and their supporters of different nationalities. In 1978, he was recognized by the State of Israel as Righteous Among the Nations.
*[[Andrey Sheptytsky]] – [[Metropolitan Archbishop]] of the [[Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church]], harbored hundreds of Jews in his residence and in Greek Catholic monasteries. He also issued the pastoral letter, "Thou Shalt Not Kill", to protest Nazi atrocities.
*[[André and Magda Trocmé]] – A [[French people|French]] Reformed pastor and his wife who led the [[Le Chambon-sur-Lignon]] village movement that saved 3,000–5,000 Jews.
*[[Maria Skobtsova]] – [[Russian Orthodox]] nun who ran a shelter for alcoholics, drug addicts and homeless people; the shelter was also open for refugees who had fled from the [[Soviet Union]]. During the first three years of the war she also took in several hundred Jewish people fearing persecution. She died in [[Ravensbrück concentration camp]] during the end of the war, after almost two years in the camp. Canonized by the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]] as a saint; she is also named a [[Righteous among the Nations]] by [[Yad Vashem]]

'''Quakers'''

The [[Religious Society of Friends (Quakers)|Religious Society of Friends]], known as [[Quakers in Europe|Quakers]], from 1933 played a major role in assisting and saving Jews through their international network of centres (Berlin, Paris, Vienna) and organizations. In 1947, the [[List of Nobel Peace Prize laureates|Nobel Peace Prize]] was awarded to the [[Friends Service Council (1927–1978)|Friends Service Council]] and to the [[American Friends Service Committee]]. Also individual Friends did rescue work.
* [[Bertha Bracey]] – As secretary of the [[Germany Emergency Commission]], set up April 7, 1933, in Britain, she raised awareness for the dangers of the Nazi philosophy. With voluntary workers, she handled appeals for assistance from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia and contributed substantially to the [[Kindertransport]] which brought 10,000 children to England.
* [[Elisabeth Abegg]] – On May 23, 1967, Yad Vashem recognized German Quaker Elisabeth Abegg as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]]. She helped many Jewish people by offering them accommodation in her home or directing them to hiding places elsewhere.
* [[Kees Boeke]] and [[Beatrice Boeke-Cadbury|Betty Boeke-Cadbury]] – On July 4, 1991, Yad Vashem recognized Cornelis Boeke and his wife Beatrice Boeke-Cadbury as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]] for hiding Jewish children in Bilthoven.
* [[Laura van den Hoek Ostende]] – On September 29, 1994, Yad Vashem recognized Dutch Quaker Laura van den Hoek Ostende-van Honk as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding Jews in Putten, Hilversum and Amsterdam.
* [[Mary Elmes]] – On January 23, 2013, Yad Vashem recognized Irish Quaker Mary Elisabeth Elmes as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]] for rescuing Jewish children in France.
* [[Auguste Fuchs|Auguste Fuchs-Bucholz]] and Fritz Fuchs – On August 11, 2009, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Auguste Fuchs-Bucholz and Fritz Fuchs as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]].
* [[Carl Hermann]] and [[Eva Hermann-Lueddecke]] – On January 19, 1976, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Carl Hermann and Eva Hermann-Lueddecke as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]].
* [[Gilbert Lesage]] – On January 14, 1985, Yad Vashem recognized French Quaker Gilbert Lesage as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]].
* [[Gertrud Luckner]] – On February 15, 1966, Yad Vashem recognized German Quaker Gertrud Luckner as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]].
* [[Ernst Lusebrink]] and [[Elfriede Lusebrink-Bokenkruger]] – On August 11, 2009, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Ernst Lusebrink and Elfriede Lusebrink-Bokenkruger as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations.]]
* [[Geertruida Pel]] and [[Trijntje Pfann]] – On August 15, 2012, Yad Vashem recognized Dutch Quaker Geertruida Pel and her daughter Trijntje Pfann as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]].
* [[Lili Pollatz|Lili Pollatz-Engelsmann]] and [[Manfred Pollatz]] – On December 3, 2013, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Lili Louise Pollatz-Engelsmann and Erwin Herbert Manfred Pollatz as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding German and Dutch Jewish children in their home in Haarlem, Netherlands. Wijnberg, I., Hollaender, A., 'Er wacht nog een kind..., De quakers Lili en Manfred Pollatz, hun school en kindertehuis in Haarlem 1934–1945, AMB Diemen, 2014, {{ISBN|97890-79700-67-7}};
* Wijnberg, I., Hollaender, A., 'Er wacht nog een kind ..., De quakers Lili en Manfred Pollatz, huIlse Schwersensky-Zimmermann and n school en kinderte men, 2014, {{ISBN|97890-79700-67-7}}
* [[Ilse Schwersensky-Zimmermann]] and [[Gerhard Schwersensky]] – On May 2, 1985, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Gerhard Schwersensky and Ilse Schwersensky-Zimmermann as [[List of Righteous Among the Nations by country|Righteous Among the Nations]] for hiding Jews in Berlin.

== Prominent individuals ==
*[[Adolfo Kaminsky]] also spelled Adolophe Kaminsky, specialized in document forgery that assisted Jews escape Nazi Germany
*[[Khaled Abdul-Wahab]] administrator of [[Mahdia]], [[Tunisia]], under German occupation; first [[Arab]] nominated for "Righteous Among the Nations" <ref>{{cite news | title = First Arab Nominated for Holocaust Honor | agency = Associated Press | date = 2007-01-30 | url = http://www.beliefnet.com/story/211/story_21108_1.html | accessdate = 2007-02-01 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070831213921/http://www.beliefnet.com/story/211/story_21108_1.html <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2007-08-31}}</ref>
*Maria Leenderts and Petrus Johannes Jacobus Kleiss, Dutch merchants in her "Selecta Schoenenwinkel" (located at 248 Dierenselaan in Den Haag) with the cooperation of personnel of the "Quick Steps" soccer club (located on the corner of the Hardewijkstraat and the Nijkerklaan in Den Haag) and the pastor of the "Sint Thersia Van Het Kind Jesus Kerk" (located across the street from the Selecta shoe store and on the corner of the Apeldoornselaan and the Dierenselaan) accommodated many Jewish families throughout the war.
*[[Gustav Schröder]] – [[Germans|German]] Captain of the Ocean liner {{SS|St. Louis}} who, in 1939 attempted to find asylum for over 900 Jewish passengers rather than return them to Germany.
*[[Albert Battel]] – a German Wehrmacht officer.
*[[Albert Bedane]] – of [[Jersey]], provided shelter to a Jewish woman, as well as others sought by the German occupiers of the [[Channel Islands]].
*[[Victor Bodson]] helped Jews escape from Germany through an underground escape route in [[Luxembourg]].
*[[Corrie ten Boom]], rescued many Jews in the Netherlands by sheltering them at her home. – was sent to [[Ravensbrück]]
*Stefania Podgorska Burzminski and Helena Podgorska at age 16 and 7 (Helena was her sister), they smuggled out of the ghettos and saved thirteen Jews from the liquidation of the ghettos.
*Sgt.-Major [[Charles Coward]] was an English POW who smuggled over 400 Jews out of [[Monowice|Monowitz]] labour camp.
*[[Johannes Frömming]], horse trainer and driver, employed three Jewish horsemen and hid them on his farm outside Berlin.
*[[Miep Gies]], [[Jan Gies]], [[Bep Voskuijl]], [[Victor Kugler]], and [[Johannes Kleiman]] hid [[Anne Frank]] and seven others in Amsterdam, Netherlands, for two years.
*Alexandre Glasberg, Ukrainian-French priest who helped hundreds of French Jews escape deportation.
*[[Otto Hahn]], Chemistry-Professor in Berlin, helped Jewish scientists to escape and prevent them from deportation, assisted by his wife Edith Hahn, who had for years collected food for Jews hiding in Berlin.
*[[Friedrich Kellner]], justice inspector, who helped Julius and Lucie Abt, and their infant son, John Peter, escape from [[Laubach]].
*[[Markowa|Stanislaw Kielar]] – two girls from Reisenbach family
*[[Janis Lipke]] from [[Latvia]], protected and hid around 40 Jews from the Nazis in [[Riga]].
*Heralda Luxin, young woman who sheltered Jewish children in her cellar.
*Józef and Stefania Macugowscy, hid six members of the Radza family, and several others, in [[Nowy Korczyn]], Poland.
*Shyqyri Myrto, Albanian rescuer of Jozef Jakoel and his sister Keti.
*[[Dorothea Neff]], [[Austrians|Austrian]] stage actress, who hid her Jewish friend Lilli Schiff.
*[[Algoth Niska]], [[Finnish people|Finnish]] gentleman rogue and alcohol smuggler; smuggled Jews via the Baltic.
*[[Irene Gut Opdyke]], [[Poles|Polish]], hid twelve Jews in a German Major's basement.
*[[Jaap Penraat]] – [[Dutch people|Dutch]] architect who forged identity cards for Jews and helped many escape to Spain.
*[[Max Schmeling]], German boxer who hid two Jewish children in his Berlin apartment and defied Hitler's orders to fire his Jewish fight promoter, Joe Jacobs.
*[[Irena Sendler]], Polish social worker who saved about 2500 Jewish children from the [[Warsaw Ghetto]].
*[[Suzanne Spaak]], wealthy socialite who saved Jewish children in France.
*Marie Taquet-Martens and Major Emile Taquet hid some seventy-five Jewish children in a home for disabled children they were running in Jamoigne-sur-Semois, Belgium.
*[[Ilse Stanley|Ilse (Davidsohn Intrator) Stanley]], herself a German Jew living in Germany until 1939, made many trips to German concentration camps and secured the release of 412 people. After [[Kristallnacht]] when she could no longer make those trips, she continued helping German Jews leave the country legally, until her own departure in 1939.
*[[Conrad Veidt]], German actor, smuggled his Jewish wife's family out of Germany in his car. He acquired British citizenship in 1939 and used his money and his position to help various other Jews, liberals and LGBT people escape Germany. Before his death in the United States in 1943, he'd participated in various funds helping people escape Germany.<ref>Allen, Jerry C: Conrad Veidt: From Caligari to Casablanca. Boxwood Press, 1992.</ref>
*Hetty Voute, part of the Utrechtse Kindercomite in the Netherlands that rescued hundreds of Jews. Her oral history is found in the book ''The Heart Has Reasons: Holocaust Rescuers and Their Stories of Courage'' by Mark Klempner
*[[Gabrielle Weidner]] and [[Johan Hendrik Weidner]], escape network rescued 800 Jews.
*Bertha Marx and Eugen Marx assisted in saving Jews through the Resistance forces.
*JUDr Rudolf Štursa, a lawyer, and Jan Martin Vochoč, an Old Catholic priest, in Prague, baptized Jews on demand and issued over 1,500 baptism certificates.<ref>
*Dietrich Bonhoeffer – a German Lutheran pastor who joined the Abwehr (a German military intelligence organization) which was also the center of the anti-Hitler resistance, was involved in operations to help German Jews escape to Switzerland. The Nazis arrested him, imprisoned him and on April 5, 1945, Bonhoeffer was hanged shorty before the end of the war.
{{cite news | title = Tisíc pět set zachráněných životů – Schindler nebyl sám | page = 5 | language = Czech | publisher = Denní Telegraf Praha | date = 1995-06-27}}</ref>
Count Kazamery Deak Lajos & Deak Elizabeth .... Hungary / Magyaregregy ...6 people...4 children and they parents, saved, and sent over to New York City after 7 months of hiding in the basement.

== Villages helping Jews ==
*[[Cisie, Mińsk County]], Poland<!-- cited there -->
*Yaruga, [[Ukraine]]<ref>[http://www.zn.ua/3000/3150/23164/ ЯРУГА: СЕЛО-ПРАВЕДНИК. Борис ХАНДРОС | История | Человек<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20120630002349/http://www.zn.ua/3000/3150/23164/ |date=2012-06-30 }}</ref>
*[[Le Chambon-sur-Lignon]], in the [[Haute-Loire]] [[department (administrative division)|département]] in France, which saved up to 5,000 Jews.
*In [[occupied Poland]], among the [[Rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust#Partial list of communities|actual hundreds of villages]] most notable included [[Głuchów, Subcarpathian Voivodeship|Głuchów]] near [[Łańcut]] with everyone engaged,<ref name="IPN">{{pl icon}} Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, [http://www.ipn.gov.pl/portal/pl/359/913/ Wystawa „Sprawiedliwi wśród Narodów Świata”– 15 czerwca 2004 r., Rzeszów.] „Polacy pomagali Żydom podczas wojny, choć groziła za to kara śmierci – o tym wie większość z nas.” (''Exhibition "Righteous among the Nations." Rzeszów, June 15, 2004. Subtitled: "The Poles were helping Jews during the war – most of us already know that."'') Last actualization November 8, 2008.</ref> as well as villages of [[Główne]], [[Ozorków]], [[Borkowo Wielkie, Masovian Voivodeship|Borkowo]] near [[Sierpc]], [[Dąbrowica, Nisko County|Dąbrowica]] near [[Ulanów]], in [[:pl:Głupianka|Głupianka]] near [[Otwock]],<ref name="J-Ch">{{pl icon}} Jolanta Chodorska, ed., "Godni synowie naszej Ojczyzny: Świadectwa," [[Warsaw]], Wydawnictwo Sióstr Loretanek, 2002, Part Two, pp. 161–62. {{ISBN|83-7257-103-1}}</ref> and [[Teresin, Gmina Białopole|Teresin]] near [[Chełm]].<ref name="K-W">Kalmen Wawryk, ''To Sobibor and Back: An Eyewitness Account'' (Montreal: The Concordia University Chair in Canadian Jewish Studies, and The Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, 1999), pp. 66–68, 71.</ref> In [[Cisie, Mińsk County|Cisie]] near Warsaw, 25 Poles were caught hiding Jews; all were killed and the village was burned to the ground as punishment.<ref name="Rescuers51">{{cite book |title=Those Who Helped: Polish Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust |publisher=GKBZpNP–IPN |year=1997 |accessdate=17 April 2014 |author=Ryszard Walczak |isbn=9788376290430 |place=Warsaw |page=51 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aOGEAAAAIAAJ }}</ref><ref name="Datner99">{{cite book |author=[[Szymon Datner]] |title=Las sprawiedliwych. Karta z dziejów ratownictwa Żydów w okupowanej Polsce |place=Warsaw |publisher=Książka i Wiedza |year=1968 |page=99 |isbn= }}</ref> In [[Warszawa Gołąbki|Gołąbki]], [[Jerzy and Irena Krępeć]] provided a hiding place for as many as 30 Jews on their farm and set up homeschooling for all children, Christian and Jewish together; their actions were "an open secret in the village." Other villagers helped "if only to provide a meal."<ref name="P-C">Peggy Curran, "Decent people: Polish couple honored for saving Jews from Nazis," [[Montreal Gazette]], December 10, 1994; Janice Arnold, "Polish widow made Righteous Gentile," The Canadian Jewish News (Montreal edition), January 26, 1995; [[Irene Tomaszewski]] and Tecia Werbowski, ''Żegota: The Council for Aid to Jews in Occupied Poland, 1942–1945'', [[Montreal]]: Price-Patterson, 1999, pp. 131–32.</ref> Another farm couple, [[Alfreda and Bolesław Pietraszek]], provided shelter for Jewish families consisting of 18 people in [[Gmina Ceranów|Ceranów]] near [[Sokołów Podlaski]], and their neighbors brought food to those being rescued.<ref name="MI-F">{{pl icon}} [http://www.forum-znak.org.pl/index.php?t=wydarzenia&id=6109 "Odznaczenia dla Sprawiedliwych," Magazyn Internetowy Forum] 26,09,2007.</ref> In [[Markowa]], where 17 Jews survived the war in hiding with their Christian neighbors, entire Polish family of [[Józef and Wiktoria Ulma]] including 6 children and prenatal child were shot dead by the Germans for hiding the Szall and Goldman families. Dorota and Antoni Szylar hid seven members of Weltz family. Julia and Józef Bar hid five members of Reisenbach family. Michal Bar hid Jakub Lorbenfeld; while Jan and Weronika Przybylak hid Jakub Einhorn.
{{details|topic=Polish villages helping Jews|Rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust}}
*[[Tršice]], [[Czech Republic]], many people from this village helped hide a Jewish family; six of them were given the honorific of Righteous Among the Nations.
*[[Nieuwlande]], Netherlands – during the war, this small village contained 117 inhabitants. They unanimously decided in 1942 and 1943 that every household would give shelter to one Jewish household or individual during the war, thus making it impossible that anyone in the small village would betray their neighbors. Dozens of Jews were thus saved. All inhabitants have been honored by [[Yad Vashem]].
*[[Moissac]], France – There was a Jewish boarding home and orphanage in this town. When the mayor was told that the Nazis were coming, the older students would go camping for several days, the younger students were boarded with families in the area and told to be treated as members of their immediate family; the oldest students hid in the house. When it became too dangerous for the students to stay there any longer, the residents made sure that every student had a safe place to go to. If the students had to move again, the counsellors from the boarding house arranged for a new place and even escorted them to the new housing.
* The Portuguese cities of [[Figueira da Foz]], [[Porto]], [[Coimbra]], [[Curia]], [[Ericeira]] and [[Caldas da Rainha]] were assigned to house refugees. They were pleasant resorts with many available hotels.<ref>Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, Salazar, and the Jews", Publication Date: March 20, 2012 {{ISBN|978-9653083875}} p. 116</ref> The refugees led totally ordinary lives.<ref name="ReferenceB" /> They were allowed to circulate freely within town limits, practice their religions, and enroll their children in local schools. ''"Here we were given freedom of movement; we were allowed to go on outing and live as we wished"'', said Ben-Zwi Kalischer.<ref name="Shalom Kramer 1945 pp 174-182">Ben-Zwi Kalischer – On The Way to the Land of Israel tr. from the German by Shalom Kramer (Hebrew) (Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 1945) pp. 174–82</ref> Those times were captured on films that can be found at the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive.<ref>Portugal-Europe's Crossroads – http://www.ushmm.org/online/film/display/detail.php?file_num=1103</ref>

== Others ==
* The [[American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee]]
* The [[Jewish Labor Committee]] <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/collections/exhibits/tam/JLC/opener.html|title=Jewish Labor and the Holocaust|work=nyu.edu}}</ref>

== See also ==
* [[Arab rescue efforts during the Holocaust]]
* [[442nd Infantry Regiment (United States)#522nd Field Artillery Battalion|522nd Field Artillery Battalion]]
* [[British Hero of the Holocaust]]
* [[Jewish settlement in the Japanese Empire]]
* [[Lars Ernster]] member of the Board of the [[Nobel Foundation]]
* [[Shoes on the Danube Bank]]
* [[Varian Fry]]

== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist|group=note}}

== Citations ==
{{reflist|30em}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.jfr.org/ The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous: Stories of Moral Courage]
* [https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/about-the-program.html About the "Righteous Among the Nations" Program] at [[Yad Vashem]]

== Further reading ==
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Fogelman |first=Eva |authorlink=Eva Fogelman |title=[[Eva Fogelman#Conscience and Courage|Conscience and Courage: Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust]] |url= |accessdate= |year=1994 |publisher=Doubleday |isbn=0-385-42027-7 |page= }}
* {{Cite book|ref=harv|last=Phayer|first=Michael|authorlink=Michael Phayer|title=The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965|year=2000|location=Bloomington and Indianapolis|publisher=Indiana University Press|url=https://books.google.rs/books?id=aZTD96Upq9AC}}
* {{Cite book|ref=harv|last=Phayer|first=Michael|authorlink=Michael Phayer|title=Pius XII, the Holocaust, and the Cold War|year=2008|location=Bloomington and Indianapolis|publisher=Indiana University Press|url=https://books.google.rs/books?id=CgTZAAAAMAAJ}}
*{{cite book |last=Nachtstern |first=Moritz |authorlink=Moritz Nachtstern |last2=Arntzen |first2=Ragnar
|title=Counterfeiter: How a Norwegian Jew Survived the Holocaust |year=2008 |publisher=Osprey |isbn=978-1-84603-289-9}}

{{The Holocaust}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Holocaust, List Of Individuals And Groups Assisting Jews During The}}
[[Category:Lists of people by activity|Assisting]]
[[Category:People of the Holocaust|Assisting]]
[[Category:Rescue of Jews during the Holocaust| ]]
[[Category:Righteous Among the Nations]]
[[Category:The Holocaust-related lists]]
[[Category:People who rescued Jews during the Holocaust| ]]

Revision as of 10:34, 5 September 2018

Rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust are those who, during World War II, helped Jews and others escape the Holocaust conducted by Nazi Germany. A well-known rescuer was Oskar Schindler, one of thousands who have been so recognized.

Since 1963 Israel's Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem, has recognized 24,356[1] persons as Righteous among the Nations. Yad Vashem's Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority, headed by an Israeli Supreme Court justice, recognizes rescuers of Jews as Righteous among the Nations.

Notable examples by country

Holocaust rescuers came from many different countries in the world.

Poland

Poland had a large Jewish population, and, according to Norman Davies, more Jews were both killed and rescued in Poland than in any other nation: the rescue figure usually being put at between 100,000–150,000.[2] The memorial at Bełżec extermination camp commemorates 600,000 murdered Jews and 1,500 Poles who tried to save Jews.[3] Thousands in Poland have been honored as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem, constituting the largest national contingent.[4] Martin Gilbert wrote that "Poles who risked their own lives to save the Jews were indeed the exception. But they could be found throughout Poland, in every town and village."[5]

Irena Sendler, member of Żegota, saved 2,500 Jewish children

Until the end of Communist domination, much of German-occupied Poland's Holocaust history was hidden behind the veil of the Iron Curtain. During the World War II Nazi occupation, Poland was the only country where any help provided to a person of Jewish faith or origin was punishable by death. Yet 6,532 men and women (more than from any other country in the world) have been recognized as rescuers by Yad Vashem in Israel.[6][7]

Poland during the Holocaust of World War II was under total enemy control: initially half of Poland was occupied by the Germans, as the General Government and Reichskomissariat; the other half by the Soviets, along with the territories of today's Belarus and Ukraine. The list of Polish citizens officially recognized as Righteous include 700 names of those who lost their lives while trying to help their Jewish neighbors.[8] There were also groups, such as the Polish Żegota organization, that took drastic and dangerous steps to rescue victims. Witold Pilecki, a member of Armia Krajowa, the Polish Home Army, organized a resistance movement in Auschwitz from 1940, and Jan Karski tried to spread word of the Holocaust.

When AK Home Army Intelligence discovered the true fate of transports leaving the Jewish Ghetto, the Council to Aid Jews – Rada Pomocy Żydom (codename Żegota) – was established in late 1942 in co-operation with church groups. The organization saved thousands. Emphasis was placed on protecting children, as it was nearly impossible to intervene directly against the heavily guarded transports. False papers were prepared, and children were distributed among safe houses and church networks.[9] Two women founded the movement: the Catholic writer and activist Zofia Kossak-Szczucka and the socialist Wanda Filipowicz. Some of its members had been involved in Polish nationalist movements, which were themselves anti-Jewish, but which became appalled by the barbarity of the Nazi mass murders. In an emotional protest prior to the foundation of the Council, Kossak wrote that Hitler's race murders were a crime about which it was not possible to remain silent. While Polish Catholics might still feel Jews were "enemies of Poland", Kossak wrote that protest was required: "God requires this protest from us... It is required of a Catholic conscience... The blood of the innocent calls for vengeance to the heavens."[10]

In the 1948–49 Zegota Case, the Stalin-backed regime established in Poland after the war secretly tried and imprisoned the leading survivors of Zegota as part of a campaign to eliminate and besmirch resistance heroes who might threaten the new regime.[11]

Greece

The Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture writes "One cannot forget the repeated initiatives of the head of the Greek Christian Orthodox Metropolitan See of Thessaloniki, Gennadios, against the deportations, and most of all, the official letter of protest signed in Athens on March 23, 1943, by Archbishop Damaskinos of the Greek Orthodox Church, along with 27 prominent leaders of cultural, academic and professional organizations. The document, written in a very sharp language, refers to unbreakable bonds between Christian Orthodox and Jews, identifying them jointly as Greeks, without differentiation. It is noteworthy that such a document is unique in the whole of occupied Europe, in character, content and purpose".[12]

The 275 Jews of the island of Zakynthos, however, survived the Holocaust. When the island's mayor, Lucas Κarrer (Λουκάς Καρρέρ), was presented with the German order to hand over a list of Jews, Bishop Chrysostomos returned to the amazed Germans with a list of two names; his and the mayor's. Moreover, the Bishop wrote a letter to Hitler himself stating that the Jews of the island were under his supervision.[13] In the meantime the island's population hid every member of the Jewish community. When the island was almost levelled by the great earthquake of 1953, the first relief came from the state of Israel, with a message that read "The Jews of Zakynthos have never forgotten their Mayor or their beloved Bishop and what they did for us."[14]

The Jewish community of Volos, one of the most ancient in Greece, has had fewer losses than any other Jewish community in Greece thanks to the timely and dynamic intervention and mobilization of the massive communist-leftist partisan movement of EAM-ELAS (National Liberation Front (Greece)Greek People's Liberation Army) and the successful cooperation of the head of the Greek Christian Orthodox Metropolitan See of Demetrias Joachim and the chief rabbi of Volos Moses Pesach for the evacuation of Volos from the Jewish people, after the events in a Thessaloniki (displacement of the city's Jews to concentration camps).

Princess Alice of Battenberg and Greece, who was the wife of Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark and the mother of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and mother-in-law of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom stayed in occupied Athens during the Second World War, sheltering Jewish refugees, for which she is recognized as "Righteous Among the Nations" at Yad Vashem. Although the Germans and Bulgarians[15] deported a great number of Greek Jews, others were successfully hidden by their Greek neighbors.

A touching testimony of 82-year-old Simon Danieli, who traveled from Israel to his birthplace in Veria to thank the descendants of the people who helped him and his family escape Nazi persecution during World War II.

Danieli was 13 in 1942 when his family—father Joseph, a grain merchant, mother Buena, and nine siblings—fled Veria to escape the increasingly frequent atrocities committed by Nazi forces against the city’s Jews. They ended up in a small nearby village in Sykies, where the family was taken in by Giorgos and Panayiota Lanara, who offered them shelter, food and a hiding place in the woods, helped also by a priest, Nestoras Karamitsopoulos. The Nazis, however, soon stormed Sykies, where around 50 more Jews from Veria had also taken refuge. They questioned the priest about the whereabouts of the Jews, but when Karamitsopoulos refused to answer, they began raiding people’s homes. They found Jews hidden in eight homes, and promptly torched the houses. They also turned their wrath on the priest, torturing him and pulling out his beard, according to Danieli.[16]

France

Père Marie-Benoît was a French Capuchin priest who helped smuggle approximately 4,000 Jews into safety from Nazi-occupied Southern France and subsequently was recognized by Yad Vashem as a Righteous among the Nations in 1966. The French town of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon sheltered several thousand Jews. The Brazilian diplomat Luis Martins de Souza Dantas illegally issued Brazilian diplomatic visas to hundreds of Jews in France during the Vichy Government, saving them from almost certain death. Si Kaddour Benghabrit, the religious head of the Islamic Center of France, helped more than a thousand Jews by providing forged identity papers to the Jews of Paris during the German occupation of France. He also managed to hide many Jewish families in the rooms of Paris Mosque as well as in the residencies and women's prayer areas.[17][18][19][20]

Belgium

In April 1943, members of the Belgian resistance held up the twentieth convoy train to Auschwitz, and freed 231 people. Several local governments did all they could to slow down or block the registration processes for Jews they were obliged to perform by the Nazis. Many people saved children by hiding them away in private houses and boarding schools. Of the approximately 50,000 Jews in Belgium in 1940, about 25,000 were deported—though only about 1,250 survived. Marie and Emile Taquet sheltered Jewish boys in a residential school or home. The Reverend Bruno Reynders was a Catholic Belgian Monk who defied the Nazis, as he implemented the directive of Pope Pius XII to save the Jews, worked with local orphanages, Catholic Nuns and the Belgian Underground to forge false identities for Jewish children whose parents willingly gave them up in an attempt to spare their lives faced with deportation to the death camps. Pere Bruno risked his life for his values and to save the lives of an estimated 400 Jewish children and is honored as a Righteous Gentile at Yad Vashem.

L'abbé Joseph André is another Catholic priest who secured safe hiding places with Belgian families, orphanages and other institutions for Jewish children and adults.

Denmark

The Jewish community in Denmark remained relatively unaffected by Germany's occupation of Denmark on April 9, 1940. The Germans allowed the Danish government to remain in office and this cabinet rejected the notion that any "Jewish question" should exist in Denmark. No legislation was passed against Jews and the yellow badge was not introduced in Denmark. In August 1943, this situation was about to collapse as the Danish government refused to introduce the death penalty as demanded by the Germans following a series of strikes and popular protests. The German empire forced the Danish government to shut down. During these events, German diplomat Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz tipped off Danish politician Hans Hedtoft that the Danish Jews would be deported to Germany following the collapse of the Danish government. Hedtoft alerted the Danish resistance and the Jewish leader C.B. Henriques informed the acting Chief Rabbi Marcus Melchior in the absence of the Chief Rabbi Max Friediger who had already been arrested as a hostage on August 29, 1943, urging the community to go into hiding in a service on September 29, 1943. During the following weeks, more than 7,200 of Denmark's 8,000 strong Jewish community were ferried to neutral Sweden hidden in fishing boats. A small number of Jews, some 450 in all, were captured by the Germans and shipped to Theresienstadt. Danish officials were able to ensure that these prisoners weren't shipped to extermination camps, and Danish Red Cross inspections and food packages ensured focus on the Danish Jews. Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte ensured their release and transport to Denmark in the final days of the war. Denmark rescued around 7,200 Jews en masse in October 1943.

Netherlands

Based on its 1940 population of 9 million the 5,516 Jews rescued in the Netherlands represents the largest per capita number: 1 in 1,700 Dutch was awarded the Righteous Among the Nations medal.[21] Notable rescuers include:

  • Gertruida Wijsmuller-Meier, who helped save about 10,000 Jewish children from Germany and Austria just before the outbreak of the war (Kindertransport) and on the last transport ship leaving the Netherlands to the UK in May 1940.
  • Jan Zwartendijk, who as a Dutch consular representative in Kaunas, Lithuania, issued exit visas used by between 6,000 and to 10,000 Jewish refugees.
  • Those who hid and helped Anne Frank and her family, like Miep Gies.
  • Caecilia Loots, a teacher and antifascist resistance member, who saved Jewish children during the war.[22]
  • Marion van Binsbergen helped save approximately 150 Dutch Jews, most of them children, throughout the German occupation of the Netherlands.[23][24]
  • Tina Strobos, rescued over 100 Jews by hiding them in her house and providing them with forged paperwork to escape the country.[25]
  • The participants of the so-called "Amsterdam dock strike" (better known as the February strike, about 30,000 to 50,000 people who on 25 and 26 February 1941 took part in the first strike against persecution of the Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe).
  • The village of Nieuwlande (117 inhabitants) that set up a quota for residents to rescue Jews.

Serbia

After the Invasion of Yugoslavia, the country was occupied by Germany and some regions were occupied by Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and Albania. A fascist puppet state called Independent State of Croatia was created. After a devastating bombing campaign on major Serbian cities, Serbia was put under direct German command. A puppet regime led by Milan Nedić was installed. German Army and occupying forces mercilessly persecuted the Jews in Serbia proper, in Hungarian-occupied Vojvodina region, and in the territory held by the Croatian Ustashas. Serbian Jews who were not transported to concentration camps in Germany were either murdered in Nazi concentration camps within Serbia (Sajmište, Banjica and Crveni Krst), or transported to Croatian-controlled concentration camp Jasenovac and murdered there. Jews living in Hungarian-occupied regions faced mass executions, the most notorious being the Novi Sad raid in 1942.

Serbian civilians were involved in saving thousands of Yugoslavian Jews during this period. Miriam Steiner-Aviezer, a researcher into Yugoslavian Jewry and a member of Yad Vashem's Righteous Gentiles committee states: "The Serbs saved many Jews. Contrary to their present image in the world, the Serbs are a friendly, loyal people who will not abandon their neighbors."[26] Currently[when?], Yad Vashem recognizes 135 Serbians as Righteous Among Nations, the highest of any Balkan country.[27][28]

Bulgaria

File:Dimitar Peshev Ivan Minekov2.jpg
Dimitar Peshev of Bulgaria's National Assembly prevented the deportation of Bulgaria's 48,000 Jews.[29]

Bulgaria joined the Axis powers in March 1941 and took part in the invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece.[30] The Nazi-allied government of Bulgaria, led by Bogdan Filov, fully and actively assisted in the Holocaust in occupied areas. On Passover 1943, Bulgaria rounded up the great majority of Jews in Greece and Yugoslavia, transported them through Bulgaria, and handed them off to German transport to Treblinka, where almost all were killed. It did not deport its own 50,000 Jewish citizens, after yielding to pressure from the parliament deputy speaker Dimitar Peshev and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. The Nazi-allied government of Bulgaria deported a higher percentage of Jews (from the areas of Greece and the Republic of Macedonia) than did the German occupiers in the region.[31][32] In Bulgarian-occupied Greece, the Bulgarian authorities arrested the majority of the Jewish population on Passover 1943.[33][34][35][36][37] The active participation of Bulgaria in the Holocaust however did not extend to its pre-war territory and after various protests by Archbishop Stefan of Sofia and the interference of Dimitar Peshev, the planned deportation of the Bulgarian Jews (about 50,000) was stopped. The territories of Greece, Macedonia and other nations occupied by Bulgaria during World War II were not considered Bulgarian—they were only administered by Bulgaria, but Bulgaria had no say as to the affairs of these lands. As to the Jews in the sovereign state of Bulgaria, deportation to the concentration camps was denied. Furthermore, Bulgaria was officially thanked by the government of Israel despite being an ally of Nazi Germany.[38]

Dimitar Peshev was the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Bulgaria and Minister of Justice during World War II. He rebelled against the pro-Nazi cabinet and prevented the deportation of Bulgaria’s 48 000 Jews. When it came to its own Jewish citizens, the government faced strong opposition from Peshev and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. Although Peshev had been involved in various anti-Semitic legislation that was passed in Bulgaria during the early years of the War, the government decision to deport Bulgaria’s 48 000 Jews on March 8, 1943 was too much for Peshev. After being informed of the deportation, Peshev tried several times to see Prime Minister Bogdan Filov but the prime minister refused. Next, he went to see Interior Minister Petar Gabrovski insisting that he cancel the deportations. After much persuasion, Gabrovski finally called the governor of Kyustendil and instructed him to stop preparations for the Jewish deportations. By 5:30 p.m. on March 9, the order was cancelled. After the war, Peshev was charged with anti-Semitism and anti-Communism by the Soviet courts, and sentenced to death. However, after outcry from the Jewish community, his sentence was commuted to 15 years imprisonment, though released after just one year. His deeds went unrecognized after the war, as he lived in poverty in Bulgaria. It was not until 1973 that he was awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations. He died the same year.

Portugal

Historians have estimated that up to one million refugees fled from the Nazis through Portugal during World War II, an impressive number considering the size of the country’s population at that time (circa 6 million).[39] Portugal remained neutral within the overall objectives of the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance; and that astute policy under precarious conditions, made it possible for Portugal to contribute to the rescue of a large number of refugees.[40] Portuguese Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar allowed all international Jewish organizations—HIAS, HICEM, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, World Jewish Congress, and Portuguese Jewish relief committees—to establish themselves in Lisbon.[41] In 1944, in Hungary, risking their lives, the diplomats Carlos Sampaio Garrido and Carlos de Liz-Texeira Branquinho, coordinating with Salazar, also helped many Jews escape Nazis and their Hungarian allies.[42] In June 1940, when Germany invaded France, Portuguese consul in Bordeaux, Aristides de Sousa Mendes issued visas, indiscriminately, to a population in panic,[43] without asking previous authorizations from Lisbon, as he was supposed to. On June 20, the British Embassy in Lisbon accused the Consul in Bordeaux of improperly charging money for issuing visas and Sousa Mendes was called to Lisbon. The number of visas issued by Sousa Mendes cannot be determined; a 1999 study by the Yad Vashem historian Dr. Avraham Milgram published by the Shoah Resource Center, International School for Holocaust Studies,[44] asserts that there is a great difference between reality and the myth created by the generally cited numbers. Sousa Mendes never lost his title as he kept on being listed in the Portuguese Diplomatic Yearbook until 1954 and kept on receiving his full Consul salary, $1,593 Portuguese Escudos,[45][46] until the day he died.[47] Other Portuguese who deserve further credit for saving Jews during the war are Professor Francisco Paula Leite Pinto and Moisés Bensabat Amzalak. A devoted Jew, and a Salazar supporter, Amzalak headed the Lisbon Jewish community for more than fifty years (from 1926 until 1978). Leite Pinto, General Manager of the Portuguese railways, together with Amzalak, organized several trains, coming from Berlin and other cities, loaded with refugees.[48][49][50]

Spain

In Franco's Spain, several diplomats contributed very actively to rescue Jews during the Holocaust. The two most prominent ones were Ángel Sanz Briz (the Angel of Budapest), who saved around five thousand Hungarian Jews by providing them Spanish passports, and Eduardo Propper de Callejón, who helped thousands of Jews to escape from France to Spain. Other diplomats with a relevant role were Bernardo Rolland de Miota (consul of Spain at Paris), José Rojas Moreno (Ambassador at Bucharest), Miguel Ángel de Muguiro (diplomat at the Embassy in Budapest), Sebastián Romero Radigales (Consul at Athens), Julio Palencia Tubau, (diplomat at the Embassy in Sofía), Juan Schwartz Díaz-Flores (Consul at Vienna) and José Ruiz Santaella (diplomat at the Embassy in Berlin).

Lithuania

Chiune Sugihara, Japanese consul-general in Kaunas, in defiance of Japanese policy, issued thousands of visas to Jews fleeing German-occupied Poland.[51]

Chiune Sempo Sugihara, Japanese Consul-General in Kaunas, Lithuania, 1939–1940, issued thousands of visas to Jews fleeing German-occupied Poland in defiance of explicit orders from the Japanese foreign ministry. The last foreign diplomat to leave Kaunas, Sugihara continued stamping visas from the open window of his departing train. After the war, Sugihara was fired from the Japanese foreign service, ostensibly due to downsizing. In 1985, Sugihara's wife and son received the Righteous Among the Nations honor in Jerusalem, on behalf of the ailing Sugihara, who died in 1986.

Albania

Unlike many other Eastern European countries under Nazi occupation, Albania—which has a mixed Muslim and Christian population and a tradition of tolerance—became a safe haven for Jews.[52] At the end of 1938, Albania was the only remaining country in Europe that still issued visas to Jews through its embassy in Berlin.[53] Following the Nazi occupation of Albania, the country refused to hand over its small Jewish population to the Germans,[54] sometimes even providing Jewish families with forged documents.[52] During the war, about 2,000 Jews sought refuge in Albania, and many of them took shelter in rural parts of the country where they were protected by the local population.[52] At the end of the war, Albania's Jewish population was greater than it was prior to the war, making it the only country in Europe where the Jewish population increased during World War II.[55][56] Out of two thousand Jews in total,[57] only five Albanian Jews perished at the hands of the Nazis.[54][58] They were discovered by the Germans and subsequently deported to Pristina.[59]

Between February and March in 1939, King Zog I of Albania granted asylum to 300 Jewish refugees before being overthrown by the Italian fascists in April the same year. When the Italians requisitioned the Albanian puppet government to expel its Jewish refugees, the Albanian leaders refused, and in the following years, 400 more Jewish refugees found sanctuary in Albania.[60]

Refik Veseli was the first Albanian to be awarded the title Righteous Among the Nations,[61] having declared afterwards that betraying the Jews "would have disgraced his village and his family. At minimum his home would be destroyed and his family banished".[62] On July 21, 1992, Mihal Lekatari, an Albanian partisan from Kavajë, was recognized as Righteous Among the Nations. Lekatari is noted for stealing blank identity papers from the municipality of Harizaj and distributing identity papers with Muslim names on them to Jewish refugees.[63] In 1997, Albanian Shyqyri Myrto was honored for rescuing Jews, with the Anti-Defamation League's Courage to Care Award presented to his son, Arian Myrto.[64] In 2006, a plaque honoring the compassion and courage of Albania during the Holocaust was dedicated in Holocaust Memorial Park in Sheepshead Bay in Brooklyn, New York, with the Albanian ambassador to the United Nations in attendance.[note 1]

During the war, some parts of Kosovo and Macedonia which were occupied by the Axis powers were annexed to Albania, and an estimated 600 Jews were captured in these territories, and consequently killed.[66]

Finland

The government of Finland generally refused to deport Finnish Jews to Germany. It has been said that Finnish government officials told German envoys that "Finland has no Jewish Problem". However, the Secret Police ValPo deported 8 Jews in 1942 who had criminal records. Moreover, it seems highly likely that Finland deported Soviet POWs, among them a number of Jews. The majority of Finnish Jews however, were protected by the government's co-belligerence with Germany. Their men joined the Finnish army and fought on the front.

The most notable Finnish individual involved in aiding the Jews was Algoth Niska (1888–1954). Niska had been smuggler during the Finnish prohibition, but had run into financial troubles after its end in 1932, so when Albert Amtmann, an Austrian-Jewish acquaintance, expressed his concerns over his people's position in Europe, Niska quickly saw a business opportunity in smuggling Jews out of Germany. The modus operandi was quickly established. Niska would forge Finnish passports and Amtmann would acquire the customers, who with their new passports would able to cross the border out of Germany. All in all, Niska falsified passports for 48 Jews during 1938 and earned 2,5 million Finnish marks ($890,000 or £600,000 in today's money) selling them. Only three of the Jews are known to have survived the Holocaust while twenty were certainly caught. The fates of the other twenty-five are not known. Involved in the operation with Niska and Amtmann were Major Rafael Johannes Kajander, Axel Belewicz and Belewicz's girlfriend Kerttu Ollikainen whose job was to steal the forms on which the passports were forged.[67][68]

Italy

Despite Benito Mussolini's close alliance with Hitler, Italy did not adopt Nazism's genocidal ideology towards the Jews. The Nazis were frustrated by the Italian forces' refusal to co-operate in the roundups of Jews, and no Jews were deported from Italy prior to the Nazi occupation of the country following the Italian capitulation in 1943.[69] In Italian-occupied Croatia, the Nazi envoy Siegfried Kasche advised Berlin that Italian forces had "apparently been influenced" by Vatican opposition to German anti-Semitism.[70] As anti-Axis feeling grew in Italy, the use of Vatican Radio to broadcast papal disapproval of race murder and anti-Semitism angered the Nazis.[71] Mussolini was overthrown in July 1943, and the Nazis moved to occupy Italy, commencing a round-up of Jews. Although thousands were caught, the great majority of Italy's Jews were saved. As in other nations, Catholic networks were heavily engaged in rescue efforts.[note 2]

In Fiume (northern Italy, today Croatian Rijeka), Giovanni Palatucci, after the promulgation of racial laws against Jews in 1938 and at the beginning of war in 1940, as chief of the Foreigners' Office, forged documents and visas to Jews threatened by deportation. He managed to destroy all documented records of the some 5,000 Jewish refugees living in Fiume, issuing them false papers and providing them with funds. Palatucci then sent the refugees to a large internment camp in southern Italy protected by his uncle, Giuseppe Maria Palatucci, the Catholic Bishop of Campagna. Following the 1943 capitulation of Italy, Fiume was occupied by Nazis. Palatucci remained as head of the police administration without real powers. He continued to clandestinely help Jews and maintain contact with the Resistance, until his activities were discovered by the Gestapo. The Swiss Consul to Trieste, a close friend of his, offered him a safe pass to Switzerland, but Giovanni Palatucci sent his young Jewish fiancée instead. Palatucci was arrested on September 13, 1944. He was condemned to death, but the sentence was later commuted to deportation to Dachau, where he died.

On 19 July 1944, the Gestapo rounded up the nearly 2000 Jewish inhabitants of the island of Rhodes, which had been governed by Italy since 1912. Of the approximately 2,000 Rhodesli Jews who were deported to Auschwitz and elsewhere, only 104 survived.

Giorgio Perlasca, under the guise of Spanish ambassador in Budapest, was able to put under his protection thousands of Jews and non-Jews destined to concentration camps.

Martin Gilbert wrote that, in October 1943, with the SS occupying Rome and determined to deport the city's 5000 Jews, the Vatican clergy had opened the sanctuaries of the Vatican to all "non-Aryans" in need of rescue in an attempt to forestall the deportation. "Catholic clergy in the city acted with alacrity", wrote Gilbert. "At the Capuchin convent on the Via Siciliano, Father Benoit saved a large numbers of Jews by providing them with false identification papers [...] by the morning of October 16, a total of 4,238 Jews had been given sanctuary in the many monasteries and convents of Rome. A further 477 Jews had been given shelter in the Vatican and its enclaves." Gilbert credited the rapid rescue efforts of the Church with saving over four-fifths of Roman Jews.[72]

Other Righteous Catholic rescuers in Italy included Elisabeth Hesselblad.[73] She and two British women, Mother Riccarda Beauchamp Hambrough and Sister Katherine Flanagan have been beatified for reviving the Swedish Bridgettine Order of nuns and hiding scores of Jewish families in their convent.[74] The churches, monasteries and convents of Assisi formed the Assisi Network and served as a safe haven for Jews. Gilbert credits the network established by Bishop Giuseppe Placido Nicolini and Abbott Rufino Niccaci of the Franciscan Monastery, with saving 300 people.[75] Other Italian clerics honored by Yad Vashem include the theology professor Fr Giuseppe Girotti of Dominican Seminary of Turin, who saved many Jews before being arrested and sent to Dachau where he died in 1945; Fr Arrigo Beccari who protected around 100 Jewish children in his seminary and among local farmers in the village of Nonantola in Central Italy; and Don Gaetano Tantalo, a parish priest who sheltered a large Jewish family.[76][77][78] Of Italy's 44,500 Jews, some 7,680 were murdered in the Nazi Holocaust.[79]

Vatican City State

The Papal Palace of Castel Gandolfo, the Pope's summer residence, was thrown open to Jews fleeing the Nazi roundups in Northern Italy. In Rome, Pope Pius XII had ordered the city's Catholic institutions to open themselves to the Jews, and 4715 of the 5715 people listed for deportation by the Nazis were sheltered in 150 institutions – 477 in the Vatican itself.

In the 1930s, Pope Pius XI urged Mussolini to ask Hitler to restrain the anti-Semitic actions taking place in Germany.[80] In 1937, the Pope issued the Mit brennender Sorge (Template:Lang-de) encyclical, in which he asserted the inviolability of human rights.[81][note 3]

Pius XII

Pope Pius XII succeeded Pius XI on the eve of war in 1939. He used diplomacy to aid the victims of the Holocaust, and directed the Church to provide discreet aid.[88] His encylicals such as Summi Pontificatus and Mystici corporis preached against racism—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision".[89] His 1942 Christmas radio address denounced the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of "faultless" people because of their "nationality or race". The Nazis were furious and The Reich Security Main Office, responsible for the deportation of Jews, called him the "mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals".[90] Pius XII intervened to attempt to block Nazi deportations of Jews in various countries.[91]

Following the capitulation of Italy, Nazi deportations of Jews to death camps began. Pius XII protested at diplomatic levels, while several thousand Jews found refuge in Catholic networks. On 27 June 1943, Vatican Radio broadcast a papal injunction: "He who makes a distinction between Jews and other men is being unfaithful to God and is in conflict with God's commands".[92]

When the Nazis came to Rome in search of Jews, the Pope had already days earlier ordered the sanctuaries of the Vatican City be opened to all "non-Aryans" in need of refuge and according to Martin Gilbert, by the morning of October 16, "a total of 477 Jews had been given shelter in the Vatican and its enclaves, while another 4,238 had been given sanctuary in the many monasteries and convents of in Rome. Only 1,015 of Rome's 6,730 Jews were seized that morning".[93] Upon receiving news of the roundups on the morning of 16 October, the Pope immediately instructed Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione, to make a protest to the German ambassador. After the meeting, the ambassador gave orders for a halt to the arrests. Earlier, the Pope had helped the Jews of Rome by offering gold towards the 50 kg ransom demanded by the Nazis.[94]

Other noted rescuers assisted by Pius were Pietro Palazzini[95] Giovanni Ferrofino,[96] Giovanni Palatucci, Pierre-Marie Benoit and others. When Archbishop Giovanni Montini (later Pope Paul VI) was offered an award for his rescue work by Israel, he said he had only been acting on the orders of Pius XII.[94]

Pius' diplomatic representatives lobbied on behalf of Jews across Europe, including in Vichy France, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and Slovakia, Germany itself and elsewhere.[86][94][97][98][99][100] Many papal nuncios played important roles in the rescue of Jews, among them Giuseppe Burzio, the Vatican Chargé d'Affaires in Slovakia; Fillipo Bernardini, Nuncio to Switzerland; and Angelo Roncalli, the Nuncio to Turkey.[101] Angelo Rotta, the wartime Nuncio to Budapest and Andrea Cassulo, the Nuncio to Bucharest have been recognized as Righteous Among the Nations.

Pius directly protested the deportations of Slovakian Jews to the Bratislava government from 1942.[102] He made a direct intervention in Hungary to lobby for an end to Jewish deportations in 1944, and on July 4, the Hungarian leader, Admiral Horthy, told Berlin that deportations of Jews must cease, citing protests by the Vatican, the King of Sweden and the Red Cross.[103] The pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic Arrow Cross seized power in October, and a campaign of murder of the Jews commenced. The neutral powers led a major rescue effort and Pius' representative, Angelo Rotta, took the lead in establishing an "international Ghetto", marked by the emblems of the Swiss, Swedish, Portuguese, Spanish and Vatican legations, and providing shelter for some 25,000 Jews.[104]

In Rome, some 4,000 Italian Jews and escaped prisoners of war avoided deportation, many of them hidden in safe houses or evacuated from Italy by a resistance group organized by the Irish-born priest and Vatican official Hugh O'Flaherty. Msgr. O'Flaherty used his political connections to help secure sanctuary for dispossessed Jews.[105] The wife of the Irish ambassador, Delia Murphy, assisted him.

Norway

China

Between 1933 and 1941, the Chinese city of Shanghai accepted unconditionally over 18,000 Jewish refugees escaping the Holocaust in Europe, a number greater than those taken in by Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and British India combined during World War II. After 1943, the occupying Nazi-aligned Japanese ghettoised the Jewish refugees in Shanghai into an area known as the Shanghai ghetto. Many of the Jewish refugees in Shanghai migrated to the United States and Israel after 1948 due to the Chinese Civil War (1946–1950). Chiune Sugihara, Kiichiro Higuchi, and Fumimaro Konoe helped thousands of Jews escape The Holocaust.

Japan

The Japanese government ensured Jewish safety in China, Japan and Manchuria.[106] Japanese Army General Hideki Tōjō received Jewish refugees in accordance with Japanese national policy and rejected German protest.[107]

Bolivia

Between 1938 and 1941, around 20,000 Jews were given visas for Bolivia under an agricultural visa program. Although most moved on to the neighboring countries of Argentina, Uruguay and Chile, some stayed and created a Jewish Community in Bolivia. [108]

Leaders and diplomats

Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg and his colleagues saved as many as 100,000 Hungarian Jews by providing them with diplomatic passes.
Aristides de Sousa Mendes, between June 16 and 23, 1940, frantically issued Portuguese visas, free of charge, to over 30,000 refugees seeking to escape the Nazi terror.
Chinese consul in Vienna, Ho Feng-Shan, freely issued thousands of visas to Jews.
  • Per AngerSwedish diplomat in Budapest who originated the idea of issuing provisional passports to Hungarian Jews to protect them from arrest and deportation to camps. Anger collaborated with Raoul Wallenberg to save the lives of thousands of Jews.
  • Władysław BartoszewskiPolish Żegota activist.
  • The Most Illustrious duke Roberto de Castro Brandão – Brazilian diplomat and nobleman who issued diplomatic visas and passports to Jews in Marseilles, France. He was later deported, along with his daughter Maria-Theresa marchioness Siciliano di Rende and later Lady Pretyman, née de Castro Brandão, and his son, Brazilian Ambassador, current duke Guy Marie de Castro Brandão, as a diplomatic prisoner in the Rheinhotel Dreesen in Bad Godesberg where Hitler used to go regularly. He stayed there until the end of the war and was exchanged with German soldiers imprisoned by the Allies.
  • Count Folke Bernadotte of Wisborg – Swedish diplomat, who negotiated the release of 27,000 people (a significant number of whom were Jews) to hospitals in Sweden.
  • Jacob (Jack) Benardout – British diplomat to Dominican Republic before and during World War II. Issued numerous Dominican Republic visas to Jews in Germany. Only 16 Jewish families arrived in the Dominican Republic (the other Jews dispersed to countries along the way, e.g. Britain, America) and so created the Jewish community of the Dominican Republic.[109]
  • Hiram Bingham IV – American Vice Consul in Marseilles, France, 1940–1941.
  • José Castellanos Contreras – a Salvadorean army colonel and diplomat who, while working as El Salvador's Consul General in Geneva from 1942–45, and in conjunction with George Mantello, helped save at least 13,000 Central European Jews from Nazi persecution by providing them with false papers of Salvadorean nationality.
  • Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz – German diplomatic attaché in Denmark. Alerted Danish politician Hans Hedtoft about the imminent German plans deport to Denmark's Jewish community, thus enabling the following rescue of the Danish Jews.
  • Harald Edelstam – Swedish diplomat in Norway who helped to protect and smuggle hundreds of Jews and Norwegian resistance fighters to Sweden.
  • Gisi Fleischmann led the Bratislava Working Group, one of the most important rescue groups, in partnership with Rabbi Chaim Michael Dov Weissmandl. They successfully negotiated with the Nazis in early 1942 to stop the transports from Slovakia and a few months later, via the Europa plan, to try to stop transports from other parts of Europe. They demanded bombing of the rail lines to Auschwitz and authored/distributed the Auschwitz Report in 1944.
  • Frank FoleyBritish MI6 agent undercover as a passport officer in Berlin, saved around 10,000 people by issuing forged passports to Britain and the British Mandate of Palestine.
  • Rafael Leónidas Trujillo – the Dominican dictator promised to receive 100,000 Jewish refugees into the Dominican Republic in 1938 when Franklin D. Roosevelt organized an international conference in Evian to discuss the persecution of the Jews. Dominican Republic was the only nation accepting Jews immigrants after the conference.[110] The DORSA (Dominican Republic Settlement Association) was formed to settle Jews on the northern coast. 5,000 visas were issued, but only 645 European Jews reached the settlement. The refugees were assigned land and cattle and the town of Sosúa was founded.[110] 5000 dollars in gold from Jewish International in New York were paid for each person taken by the Trujillo.[110] Other refugees settled in the capital Santo Domingo.[111][112]
  • Albert GöringGerman businessman (and younger brother of leading Nazi Hermann Göring) who helped Jews and dissidents survive in Germany.
  • Paul GrüningerSwiss commander of police who provided falsely dated papers to over 3,000 refugees so they could escape Austria following the Anschluss.
Paul Grüninger, commander of the police of the Canton of St. Gallen in Switzerland, who provided falsely dated papers from late 1938 to autumn 1939 to over 3,000 refugees so they could escape Austria.[113][114]
  • Kiichiro Higuchi – Japanese lieutenant general who saved 20,000 Jewish refugees.[115]
  • Wilm Hosenfeld – German officer who helped pianist Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Polish Jew, among many others.
  • Seishirō ItagakiJapanese Army Minister who proposed and adopted a Japanese national policy to receive Jewish refugees.[116]
  • Lyndon B. Johnson – Future President of the United States who, as a member of the United States House of Representatives in 1938, helped Austrian conductor Erich Leinsdorf gain permanent residency in the United States. Johnson later helped Jews enter the U.S. through Latin America and become workers on National Youth Administration projects in Texas.[117]
  • Prince Constantin Karadja – Romanian diplomat, who saved over 51,000 Jews from deportation and extermination, as credited by Yad Vashem in 2005.[118]
  • Jan KarskiPolish emissary of Armia Krajowa to Western Allies and eye-witness of the Holocaust.
  • Necdet KentTurkish Consul General at Marseille, who granted Turkish citizenship to hundreds of Jews. At one point, he entered an Auschwitz-bound train at enormous personal risk to save from deportation 70 Jews, to whom he had granted Turkish citizenship.
  • Fumimaro KonoeJapanese Prime Minister who adopted a Japanese national policy to receive Jewish refugees.[116]
  • Zofia Kossak-SzczuckaPolish founder of Zegota.
  • Hillel Kook (aka Peter Bergson) established a US-based rescue group, which had considerable support in the Congress and Senate. The group's activism was the major factor forcing President Roosevelt to establish the War Refugee Board in January 1944. One of the WRB's important actions was initiation and sponsoring of the Wallenberg mission to Budapest.
  • Carl LutzSwiss consul in Budapest, protected tens of thousands of Jews in Hungary.
  • Luis Martins de Souza Dantas – Brazilian in charge of the Brazilian diplomatic mission in France. He granted Brazilian visas to several Jews and other minorities persecuted by the Nazis. He was proclaimed as Righteous among the Nations in 2003.[119]
  • George Mantello (b. Mandl Gyorgy) – El Salvador's honorary consul for Hungary, Romania, and Czechoslovakia – provided Salvadoran protection papers for thousands of Jews. He spearheaded an unprecedented Swiss grassroots protests and press campaign. It led to Roosevelt, Churchill and other world leaders threatening Hungary's ruler, regent Miklos Horthy, with post-war retribution if the transports don't stop. That ended the deportation of Jews from Hungary to Auschwitz.[120][121]
  • Boris III of Bulgaria – King of Bulgaria from 1918–1943 Resisted demands from Hitler to deport the Jews resulting in all 50,000 being spared, Boris died in 1943 after meeting with Hitler.
  • Paul V. McNutt – United States High Commissioner of the Philippines, 1937–1939, who facilitated the entry of Jewish refugees into the Philippines.[122]
  • Helmuth James Graf von Moltke – adviser to the Third Reich on international law; active in Kreisau Circle resistance group, sent Jews to safe-haven countries.
  • Delia Murphy – wife of Dr. Thomas J. Kiernan, Irish minister in Rome 1941–1946, who worked with Hugh O'Flaherty and was part of the network that saved the lives of POWs and Jews in the hands of the Gestapo.[123]
  • Jean-Marie Musy toward end of the war negotiated with Himmler on behalf of Recha Sternbuch – to rescue large numbers of Jews in the concentration camps
  • Giovanni PalatucciItalian police official who saved several thousand.
  • Giorgio PerlascaItalian. When Ángel Sanz Briz was ordered to leave Hungary, he falsely claimed to be his substitute and saved some thousands more Jews.
  • Dimitar Peshev – Deputy Speaker of the Bulgarian Parliament, played a major role in rescuing Bulgaria's 48 000 Jews, the entire Jewish population in Bulgaria at the time.
  • Frits Philips – Dutch industrialist who saved 382 Jews by insisting to the Nazis that they were indispensable employees of Philips.
  • Witold Pilecki – the only person who volunteered to be imprisoned in Auschwitz, organized a resistance inside the camp and as a member of Armia Krajowa sent the first reports on the camp atrocities to the Polish Government in Exile, from where they were passed to the rest of the Western Allies.
  • Karl Plagge – a major in the Wehrmacht Heer who issued work permits in order to save almost 1,000 Jews (see The Search for Major Plagge: The Nazi Who Saved Jews, by Michael Good)
  • Enver Hoxha – Led the Resistance against the German and Italians in Albania. Hoxha refused that the Germans or collaborationists deport a single Jew, therefore Albania was the only country in Europe to have an increased Jewish population after the war.
  • Mehmet Shehu – a resistance fighter in Albania who allowed Jews to enter Albania, and refused to hand the Jews over to The Germans, during the occupation
  • Eduardo Propper de Callejón – First Secretary in the Spanish embassy in Paris who stamped and signed passports almost non-stop for four days in 1940 to let Jewish refugees escape to Spain and Portugal.
  • Traian PopoviciRomanian mayor of Cernăuţi (Chernivtsi) who saved 20,000 Jews of Bukovina.
  • Manuel L. Quezon – President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, 1935–1941, assisted in resettling Jewish refugees on the island of Mindanao.[122]
  • Florencio Rivas – Consul General of Uruguay in Germany, who allegedly hid one hundred and fifty Jews during Kristallnacht and later provided them with passports.[124]
  • Gilberto Bosques Saldívar – General Consul of Mexico in Marseilles, France. For two years, he issued Mexican visas to around 40,000 Jews, Spaniards and political refugees, allowing them to escape to Mexico and other countries. He was imprisoned by the Nazis in 1943 and released to Mexico in 1944.[125]
  • Ángel Sanz BrizSpanish consul in Hungary. Together with Giorgio Perlasca, he saved more than 5,000 Jews in Budapest by issuing Spanish passports to them.
  • Abdol-Hossein Sardari – Head of Consular affairs at the Iranian Embassy in Paris. He saved many Iranian Jews and gave 500 blank Iranian passports to an acquaintance of his, to be used by non-Iranian Jews in France.[126]
  • Oskar SchindlerGerman businessman whose efforts to save his 1,200 Jewish workers were recounted in the book Schindler's Ark and the film Schindler's List.
  • Rabbi Solomon Schonfeld set up a Uk-based rescue committee and rescued many thousands of Jews.
  • Eduard Schulte – German industrialist, the first to inform the Allies about the mass extermination of Jews.
  • Irena SendlerPolish head of Zegota children's department who saved 2,500 Jewish children.
  • Ho Feng Shan – Chinese Consul in Vienna who freely issued visas to Jews.
  • Henryk SlawikPolish diplomat who saved 5,000–10,000 people in Budapest, Hungary.
  • Aristides de Sousa MendesPortuguese diplomat in Bordeaux, who signed about 30,000 visas to help Jews and persecuted minorities to escape the Nazis and The Holocaust.
  • Recha Sternbuch rescued large numbers of Jews with the help of her husband Yitzchak by smuggling them into Switzerland from Austria, by distributing protection papers, by negotiating with Himmler with help of Jean-Marie Musy to save Jews in the concentration camps as the Germans were retreating, and by rescuing the Jews who arrived to Bergen-Belsen by train from Hungary.
  • Chiune SugiharaJapanese consul to Lithuania, 2,140 (mostly Polish) Jews and an unknown number of additional family members were saved by passports, many unauthorized, provided by him in 1940.
  • Hideki TōjōGeneral and Prime Minister of Japan who received Jewish refugees in Manchuria and rejected German protest.[107]
  • Selâhattin ÜlkümenTurkish diplomat who saved the lives of some 42 Jewish Turkish families, more than 200 persons, among a Jewish community of some 2000 after the Germans occupied the island of Rhodes in 1944.
  • Raoul WallenbergSwedish diplomat. Wallenberg saved the lives of tens of thousands of Jews condemned to certain death by the Nazis during World War II. He disappeared in January 1945 after being imprisoned by the Soviet troops who took control of Budapest.
  • Sir Nicholas WintonBritish stockbroker who organized the Czech Kindertransport which sent 669 children (most of them Jewish) to foster parents ln England and Sweden from Czechoslovakia and Austria after Kristallnacht. Sir Nicholas was nominated for the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize.[127][128]
  • Namik Kemal Yolga – A Vice-Consul at the Turkish Embassy in Paris who saved numerous Turkish Jews from deportation.
  • Guelfo ZamboniConsul General at Thessaloniki who gave false papers to save the lives of over 300 Jews residing there.
  • Raymond Geist – Consul General at the American embassy in Berlin. While he was posted in Berlin from 1929 to 1939 he personally intervened with Nazi officials to save those (German Jews as well as opponents of the Nazi regime), who were under the threat of being imprisoned in concentration camps and issued more than 50,000 visas to save their lives. According to the TV series Genius, he was the one who issued visas to Albert Einstein and his family even when he was under orders from J. Edgar Hoover, who was at that time the Director of the FBI to not to give the visas till Albert Einstein signed a declaration confirming that he was not a member of the Communist Party. He was awarded the Order of Merit by the German Federal Republic in 1954.[129]

Religious figures

Catholic officials

  • Pope Pius XII, preached against racism in encyclicals like Summi Pontificatus. Used Vatican Radio to denounced race murders and anti-Semitism.[92] Directly lobbied Axis officials to stop Jewish deportations.[103] Opened the sanctuaries of the Vatican to Rome's Jews during the Nazi roundup.[93]
  • Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty CBEIrish Catholic priest who saved more than 6,500 Allied soldiers and Jews;[130] known as the "Scarlet Pimpernel of the Vatican". Retold in the film The Scarlet and the Black.
  • Fillipo Bernardini, papal nuncio to Switzerland.[101]
  • Giuseppe Burzio, the Vatican Chargé d'Affaires in Slovakia.[101] Protested the anti-Semitism and totalitarianism of the Tiso regime.[102] Burzio advised Rome of the deteriorating situation for Jews in the Nazi puppet state, sparking Vatican protests on behalf of Jews.[131]
  • Angelo Roncalli, the nuncio to Turkey saved a number of Croatian, Bulgarian and Hungarian Jews by assisting their migration to Palestine. Roncalli succeeded Pius XII as Pope John XXIII, and always said that he had been acting on the orders of Pius XII in his actions to rescue Jews.[132]
  • Andrea Cassulo, papal nuncio in Romania.[133] Appealed directly to Marshall Antonescu to limit the deportations of Jews to Nazi concentration camps planned for the summer of 1942.[134]
  • Cardinal Gerlier of France refused to hand over Jewish children being sheltered in Catholic homes. In September 1942, Eight Jesuits were arrested for sheltering hundreds of children on Jesuit properties, and Pius XII's Secretary of State, Cardinal Maglione protested to the Vichy Ambassador.[135]
  • Giuseppe Marcone, apostolic visitor to Croatia, lobbied Croat regime, saved 1000 Jewish partners in mixed marriages.[136]
  • Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac of Zagreb, condemned Croat atrocities against both Serbs and Jews, and himself saved a group of Jews.[136] He declared publicly in the Spring of 1942 that it was "forbidden to exterminate Gypsies and Jews because they are said to belong to an inferior race".[100]
  • Bishop Pavel Gojdic protested the persecution of Slovak Jews. Gojdic was beatified by the Church and recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem.[137]
  • Angelo Rotta, papal nuncio to Hungary. Actively protested Hungary's mistreatment of the Jews, and helped persuade Pope Pius XII to lobby the Hungarian leader Admiral Horthy to stop their deportation.[138] He issued protective passports for Jews and 15,000 safe conduct passes – the nunciature sheltered some 3000 Jews in safe houses.[138] An "International Ghetto" was established, including more than 40 safe houses marked by the Vatican and other national emblems. 25,000 Jews found refuge in these safe houses. Elsewhere in the city, Catholic institutions hid several thousand more Jewish people.[139]
  • Archbishop Johannes de Jong, later Cardinal, of Utrecht, Netherlands, who drew up together with Titus Brandsma O.Carm. († Dachau, 1942) a letter in which he called for all Catholics to assist persecuted Jews, and in which he openly condemned the Nazi German "deportation of our Jewish fellow citizens" (From: Herderlijk Schrijven, read from all pulpits on Sunday 26 January 1942).
  • Archbishop Jules-Géraud Saliège of Toulouse – lead a number of French bishops (including Monseigneur Théas, Bishop of Montauban, Monseigneur Delay, Bishop of Marseilles, Cardinal Gerlier, Archbishop of Lyon, Monseigneur Vansteenberghe of Bayonne and Monseigneur Moussaron, Archbishop of Albi – in denouncing roundups and mistreatment of Jews in France, spurring greater resistance.[140]
  • Père Marie-Benoît, Capuchin monk who saved many Jews in Marseille and later in Rome where he became known among the Jewish community as "father of the Jews".[76]
  • Mother Matylda Getter's Franciscan Sisters of the Family of Mary sheltered Jewish children escaping the Warsaw Ghetto.[141] Getter's convent rescued more than 750.[142]
  • Alfred Delp S.J., a Jesuit priest who helped Jews escape to Switzerland while rector of St. Georg Church in suburban Munich; also involved with the Kreisau Circle. Executed February 2, 1945 in Berlin.
  • Rufino Niccacci, a Franciscan friar and priest who sheltered Jewish refugees in Assisi, Italy, from September 1943 through June 1944.
  • Maximilian KolbePolish Conventual Franciscan friar. During the Second World War, in the friary, Kolbe provided shelter to people from Greater Poland, including 2,000 Jews. He was also active as a radio amateur, vilifying Nazi activities through his reports.
  • Bernhard LichtenbergGerman Catholic priest at Berlin's Cathedral. Sent to Dachau because he prayed for Jews at Evening Prayer.
  • Sára Salkaházi – a Hungarian Roman Catholic nun who sheltered approximately 100 Jews in Budapest.
  • Margit Slachta, of the Hungarian Social Service Sisterhood, went to Rome to encourage papal action against the Jewish persecutions.[143] In Hungary, she had sheltered the persecuted and protested forced labour and antisemitism.[143] In 1944, Pius appealed directly to the Hungarian government to halt the deportation of the Jews of Hungary. The Sisters of Social Service, nuns who saved thousands of Hungarian Jews; included Sister Sara Salkahazi, recognized by Yad Vashem as well as beatified.

Others

Quakers

The Religious Society of Friends, known as Quakers, from 1933 played a major role in assisting and saving Jews through their international network of centres (Berlin, Paris, Vienna) and organizations. In 1947, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the Friends Service Council and to the American Friends Service Committee. Also individual Friends did rescue work.

  • Bertha Bracey – As secretary of the Germany Emergency Commission, set up April 7, 1933, in Britain, she raised awareness for the dangers of the Nazi philosophy. With voluntary workers, she handled appeals for assistance from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia and contributed substantially to the Kindertransport which brought 10,000 children to England.
  • Elisabeth Abegg – On May 23, 1967, Yad Vashem recognized German Quaker Elisabeth Abegg as Righteous Among the Nations. She helped many Jewish people by offering them accommodation in her home or directing them to hiding places elsewhere.
  • Kees Boeke and Betty Boeke-Cadbury – On July 4, 1991, Yad Vashem recognized Cornelis Boeke and his wife Beatrice Boeke-Cadbury as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding Jewish children in Bilthoven.
  • Laura van den Hoek Ostende – On September 29, 1994, Yad Vashem recognized Dutch Quaker Laura van den Hoek Ostende-van Honk as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding Jews in Putten, Hilversum and Amsterdam.
  • Mary Elmes – On January 23, 2013, Yad Vashem recognized Irish Quaker Mary Elisabeth Elmes as Righteous Among the Nations for rescuing Jewish children in France.
  • Auguste Fuchs-Bucholz and Fritz Fuchs – On August 11, 2009, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Auguste Fuchs-Bucholz and Fritz Fuchs as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Carl Hermann and Eva Hermann-Lueddecke – On January 19, 1976, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Carl Hermann and Eva Hermann-Lueddecke as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Gilbert Lesage – On January 14, 1985, Yad Vashem recognized French Quaker Gilbert Lesage as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Gertrud Luckner – On February 15, 1966, Yad Vashem recognized German Quaker Gertrud Luckner as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Ernst Lusebrink and Elfriede Lusebrink-Bokenkruger – On August 11, 2009, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Ernst Lusebrink and Elfriede Lusebrink-Bokenkruger as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Geertruida Pel and Trijntje Pfann – On August 15, 2012, Yad Vashem recognized Dutch Quaker Geertruida Pel and her daughter Trijntje Pfann as Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Lili Pollatz-Engelsmann and Manfred Pollatz – On December 3, 2013, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Lili Louise Pollatz-Engelsmann and Erwin Herbert Manfred Pollatz as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding German and Dutch Jewish children in their home in Haarlem, Netherlands. Wijnberg, I., Hollaender, A., 'Er wacht nog een kind..., De quakers Lili en Manfred Pollatz, hun school en kindertehuis in Haarlem 1934–1945, AMB Diemen, 2014, ISBN 97890-79700-67-7;
  • Wijnberg, I., Hollaender, A., 'Er wacht nog een kind ..., De quakers Lili en Manfred Pollatz, huIlse Schwersensky-Zimmermann and n school en kinderte men, 2014, ISBN 97890-79700-67-7
  • Ilse Schwersensky-Zimmermann and Gerhard Schwersensky – On May 2, 1985, Yad Vashem recognized German Quakers Gerhard Schwersensky and Ilse Schwersensky-Zimmermann as Righteous Among the Nations for hiding Jews in Berlin.

Prominent individuals

  • Adolfo Kaminsky also spelled Adolophe Kaminsky, specialized in document forgery that assisted Jews escape Nazi Germany
  • Khaled Abdul-Wahab administrator of Mahdia, Tunisia, under German occupation; first Arab nominated for "Righteous Among the Nations" [146]
  • Maria Leenderts and Petrus Johannes Jacobus Kleiss, Dutch merchants in her "Selecta Schoenenwinkel" (located at 248 Dierenselaan in Den Haag) with the cooperation of personnel of the "Quick Steps" soccer club (located on the corner of the Hardewijkstraat and the Nijkerklaan in Den Haag) and the pastor of the "Sint Thersia Van Het Kind Jesus Kerk" (located across the street from the Selecta shoe store and on the corner of the Apeldoornselaan and the Dierenselaan) accommodated many Jewish families throughout the war.
  • Gustav SchröderGerman Captain of the Ocean liner SS St. Louis who, in 1939 attempted to find asylum for over 900 Jewish passengers rather than return them to Germany.
  • Albert Battel – a German Wehrmacht officer.
  • Albert Bedane – of Jersey, provided shelter to a Jewish woman, as well as others sought by the German occupiers of the Channel Islands.
  • Victor Bodson helped Jews escape from Germany through an underground escape route in Luxembourg.
  • Corrie ten Boom, rescued many Jews in the Netherlands by sheltering them at her home. – was sent to Ravensbrück
  • Stefania Podgorska Burzminski and Helena Podgorska at age 16 and 7 (Helena was her sister), they smuggled out of the ghettos and saved thirteen Jews from the liquidation of the ghettos.
  • Sgt.-Major Charles Coward was an English POW who smuggled over 400 Jews out of Monowitz labour camp.
  • Johannes Frömming, horse trainer and driver, employed three Jewish horsemen and hid them on his farm outside Berlin.
  • Miep Gies, Jan Gies, Bep Voskuijl, Victor Kugler, and Johannes Kleiman hid Anne Frank and seven others in Amsterdam, Netherlands, for two years.
  • Alexandre Glasberg, Ukrainian-French priest who helped hundreds of French Jews escape deportation.
  • Otto Hahn, Chemistry-Professor in Berlin, helped Jewish scientists to escape and prevent them from deportation, assisted by his wife Edith Hahn, who had for years collected food for Jews hiding in Berlin.
  • Friedrich Kellner, justice inspector, who helped Julius and Lucie Abt, and their infant son, John Peter, escape from Laubach.
  • Stanislaw Kielar – two girls from Reisenbach family
  • Janis Lipke from Latvia, protected and hid around 40 Jews from the Nazis in Riga.
  • Heralda Luxin, young woman who sheltered Jewish children in her cellar.
  • Józef and Stefania Macugowscy, hid six members of the Radza family, and several others, in Nowy Korczyn, Poland.
  • Shyqyri Myrto, Albanian rescuer of Jozef Jakoel and his sister Keti.
  • Dorothea Neff, Austrian stage actress, who hid her Jewish friend Lilli Schiff.
  • Algoth Niska, Finnish gentleman rogue and alcohol smuggler; smuggled Jews via the Baltic.
  • Irene Gut Opdyke, Polish, hid twelve Jews in a German Major's basement.
  • Jaap PenraatDutch architect who forged identity cards for Jews and helped many escape to Spain.
  • Max Schmeling, German boxer who hid two Jewish children in his Berlin apartment and defied Hitler's orders to fire his Jewish fight promoter, Joe Jacobs.
  • Irena Sendler, Polish social worker who saved about 2500 Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto.
  • Suzanne Spaak, wealthy socialite who saved Jewish children in France.
  • Marie Taquet-Martens and Major Emile Taquet hid some seventy-five Jewish children in a home for disabled children they were running in Jamoigne-sur-Semois, Belgium.
  • Ilse (Davidsohn Intrator) Stanley, herself a German Jew living in Germany until 1939, made many trips to German concentration camps and secured the release of 412 people. After Kristallnacht when she could no longer make those trips, she continued helping German Jews leave the country legally, until her own departure in 1939.
  • Conrad Veidt, German actor, smuggled his Jewish wife's family out of Germany in his car. He acquired British citizenship in 1939 and used his money and his position to help various other Jews, liberals and LGBT people escape Germany. Before his death in the United States in 1943, he'd participated in various funds helping people escape Germany.[147]
  • Hetty Voute, part of the Utrechtse Kindercomite in the Netherlands that rescued hundreds of Jews. Her oral history is found in the book The Heart Has Reasons: Holocaust Rescuers and Their Stories of Courage by Mark Klempner
  • Gabrielle Weidner and Johan Hendrik Weidner, escape network rescued 800 Jews.
  • Bertha Marx and Eugen Marx assisted in saving Jews through the Resistance forces.
  • JUDr Rudolf Štursa, a lawyer, and Jan Martin Vochoč, an Old Catholic priest, in Prague, baptized Jews on demand and issued over 1,500 baptism certificates.[148]

Count Kazamery Deak Lajos & Deak Elizabeth .... Hungary / Magyaregregy ...6 people...4 children and they parents, saved, and sent over to New York City after 7 months of hiding in the basement.

Villages helping Jews

  • Tršice, Czech Republic, many people from this village helped hide a Jewish family; six of them were given the honorific of Righteous Among the Nations.
  • Nieuwlande, Netherlands – during the war, this small village contained 117 inhabitants. They unanimously decided in 1942 and 1943 that every household would give shelter to one Jewish household or individual during the war, thus making it impossible that anyone in the small village would betray their neighbors. Dozens of Jews were thus saved. All inhabitants have been honored by Yad Vashem.
  • Moissac, France – There was a Jewish boarding home and orphanage in this town. When the mayor was told that the Nazis were coming, the older students would go camping for several days, the younger students were boarded with families in the area and told to be treated as members of their immediate family; the oldest students hid in the house. When it became too dangerous for the students to stay there any longer, the residents made sure that every student had a safe place to go to. If the students had to move again, the counsellors from the boarding house arranged for a new place and even escorted them to the new housing.
  • The Portuguese cities of Figueira da Foz, Porto, Coimbra, Curia, Ericeira and Caldas da Rainha were assigned to house refugees. They were pleasant resorts with many available hotels.[157] The refugees led totally ordinary lives.[41] They were allowed to circulate freely within town limits, practice their religions, and enroll their children in local schools. "Here we were given freedom of movement; we were allowed to go on outing and live as we wished", said Ben-Zwi Kalischer.[158] Those times were captured on films that can be found at the Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive.[159]

Others

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ In 1943, the Nazis asked Albanian authorities for a list of the country's Jews. They refused to comply. "Jews were then taken from the cities and hidden in the countryside", Goldfarb explained. "Non-Jewish Albanians would steal identity cards from police stations [for Jews to use]. The underground resistance even warned that anyone who turned in a Jew would be executed." ... "There were actually more Jews in the country after the war than before—thanks to the Albanian traditions of religious tolerance and hospitality."[65]
  2. ^ The situation in Italy was somewhat peculiar in that, notwithstanding Mussolini's proclamation against Jews, most Italians had no personal hatred against them. Liliana Picciotto, the historian of the archive of Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea (Foundation Center for the Contemporary Jewish Documentation) writes that of the 32,300 Jews living in Italy under German occupation, only 8,000 were arrested, whereas 23,500 escaped unharmed. She speculates that the overall percentage of Jews who survived in Italy owed this to the solidarity the persecuted found among the local population.
  3. ^ It was written partly in response to the Nuremberg Laws, and condemned racial theories and the mistreatment of people based on race.[82][83][84] Pius XI condemned the 1938 Kristallnacht, sparking mass demonstrations against Catholics and Jews in Munich, where the Bavarian Gauleiter Adolf Wagner declared: "Every utterance the Pope makes in Rome is an incitement of the Jews throughout the world to agitate against Germany".[85] The Vatican took steps to find refuge for Jews.[86] Pius XI rejected the Nazi claim of racial superiority, and insisted instead that there was only a single human race.[87]

Citations

  1. ^ The Righteous Among The Nations
  2. ^ Norman Davies; Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw; Viking; 2003; p. 200
  3. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 88
  4. ^ Norman Davies; Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw; Vikiing; 2003; p. 594
  5. ^ Martin Gilbert (2002). The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust. Doubleday. pp. 88, 109. ISBN 038560100X.
  6. ^ "Statistics – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem". yadvashem.org. Archived from the original on 2010-08-18. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ "Yad Vashem – The Righteous Among Nations". holocaustforgotten.com.
  8. ^ "List of Poles Killed Helping Jews During the Holocaust". holocaustforgotten.com.
  9. ^ Norman Davies; Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw; Vikiing; 2003; p. 200
  10. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; pp. 120–21
  11. ^ Norman Davies; Rising '44: the Battle for Warsaw; Vikiing; 2003; pp. 566, 568
  12. ^ The Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture, p. 2
  13. ^ "Η Απίστευτη Ιστορία των Εβραίων της Ζακύνθου – Μνήμη Ολοκαυτώματος – ΙΣΡΑΗΛ: ΘΥΜΑ ΤΡΟΜΟΚΡΑΤΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΜΜΕ". ΙΣΡΑΗΛ: ΘΥΜΑ ΤΡΟΜΟΚΡΑΤΩΝ ΚΑΙ ΜΜΕ.
  14. ^ Zakynthos: The Holocaust in Greece Archived 2007-05-20 at the Wayback Machine, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, URL accessed April 15, 2006.
  15. ^ Glenny, p. 508
  16. ^ "State of Israel awards three Greeks who helped Jews during WWII – Community – ekathimerini.com". ekathimerini.com.
  17. ^ Annette Herskovits, The mosque that saved Jews
  18. ^ The Great Mosque of Paris that saved Jews during the Holocaust, Offer Aderet, HAARTZ
  19. ^ Norman H Gershman, Stories of WWII, the missing pages
  20. ^ "Muslims Who Helped Save French Jews". The Forward. 10 January 2012.
  21. ^ Graaff, Arthur (18 Jan 2012), "Nederlanders redde joden", De Volkskrant (in Dutch), NL
    (Poland: 1 in 3,700; population of 24,300,000 ethnic Poles in 1939)
  22. ^ "Caecilia Antonia Maria Loots - Stories of Women Who Rescued Jews During the Holocaust". Righteous Among the Nations - Yad Vashem.
  23. ^ "Stories of Rescue Mario Pritchard Netherlands". The Jewish Foundation for the righteous. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  24. ^ "Profiles in Courage". Keene State College. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  25. ^ Langer, Emily (2012-02-29). "Tina Strobos, Dutch student who rescued 100 Jews during the Holocaust, dies at 91". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-04-22.
  26. ^ Why is Israel waffling on Kosovo?, by LARRY DERFNER, and GIL SEDAN
  27. ^ The Righteous Among The Nations Names and Numbers of Righteous Among the Nations – per Country & Ethnic Origin, as of January 1, 2017, Yad Vashem
  28. ^ http://www.makabijada.com/pravednici/pravednici.htm Association of Yugoslav Jews and Friends
  29. ^ Official portrait sculpture by Ivan Minekov, Council of Europe Art Collection.
  30. ^ Persecution of Jews in Bulgaria United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.
  31. ^ [1]
  32. ^ "The Holocaust in Macedonia: Deportation of Monastir Jewry". ushmm.org.
  33. ^ The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece Archived 2004-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece Archived 2004-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece Archived 2007-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece Archived 2004-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ The Official Web Site of KIS, the Central Jewish Council of Greece Archived 2004-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Dr Michael Bar-Zohar, Beyond Hitler's Grasp: The Heroic Rescue of Bulgaria's Jews. OCLC 716882036.
  39. ^ Lochery, Neill. "Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light, 1939–45", PublicAffairs; 1 edition (2011), ISBN 1-58648-879-1
  40. ^ Leite, Joaquim da Costa. "Neutrality by Agreement: Portugal and the British Alliance in World War II." American University, Available online at http://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1305&context=auilr
  41. ^ a b Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, Salazar, and the Jews". 2012. ISBN 978-9653083875
  42. ^ "Spared Lives: The Actions of Three Portuguese Diplomats During World War II". The Newark Public Library. August 24, 2000. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007. Retrieved 2009-07-28. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  43. ^ Caught up in the exodus, two British volunteers in the French Ambulance Corps, Dennis Freeman and Douglas Cooper (art historian), captured the drama and agony of this civilian nightmare in “The Road to Bordeaux.”[49] London: Harper, 1941
  44. ^ Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, the Consuls, and the Jewish Refugees, 1938–1941". Source: Yad Vashem Studies, vol. XXVII, Jerusalem, 1999, pp. 123–56.
  45. ^ Documents from Arquivo Digital Ministerio das Financas ACMF/Arquivo/DGCP/07/005/003
  46. ^ [2]
  47. ^ Several other sources also mention the monthly allowance that Sousa Mendes received until his death in 1954: A letter that Sousa Mendes wrote to the Portuguese Bar Association, Ordem dos Advogados – Secretaria do Conselho Geral, Lisboa, Cota – Processo nº 10/1931 Date 1946.04.29 where he says that he is receiving a monthly salary of 1,593 Portuguese Escudos. Other source: Wheeler, Douglas L., "And Who Is My Neighbor? A World War II Hero of Conscience for Portugal," Luso-Brazilian Review 26:1 (Summer, 1989): 119–39.
  48. ^ Testimonial from Professor Baltasar Rebelo de Sousa in OLIVEIRA, Jaime da Costa. «Fotobiografia de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto». No centenário do nascimento de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto, Memória 2, Lisboa, Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, 2003 – "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-01-16. Retrieved 2014-01-15. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  49. ^ Testimonial from famous Portuguese historian, Jose Hermano Saraiva – Interview to “Sol” newspaper – "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2014-03-19. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  50. ^ «Salazar visto pelos seus próximos», Testemunho de Francisco de Paula Leite Pinto, Organização de Jaime Nogueira Pinto. ISBN 972-25-0567-X, 1993 Bertrand Editora S.A.
  51. ^ David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa (2000). Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype. Lexington Books. p. 112. ISBN 0-7391-0167-6. The last diplomat to leave Kaunas, Sugihara continued stamping visas from the open window of his departing train.
  52. ^ a b c (www.dw.com), Deutsche Welle. "Albanians saved Jews from deportation in WWII | Europe | DW.COM | 27.12.2012". DW.COM. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  53. ^ Elsie, Robert. A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology and Folk Culture. p. 141.
  54. ^ a b Esposito, John L. (2004). The Islamic World: Abbasid-Historian. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-19-516520-3.
  55. ^ Rabben, Linda. Give Refuge to the Stranger: The Past, Present, and Future of Sanctuary. p. 114.
  56. ^ Himka, John-Paul; Michlic, Joanna Beata (2013). Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 51. ISBN 9780803225442.
  57. ^ Gilbert, Martin. The Righteous. p. 302.
  58. ^ Rozett, Robert; Spector, Shmuel (2013-11-26). Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. Routledge. p. 104. ISBN 9781135969509.
  59. ^ Rozett, Robert. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. p. 104.
  60. ^ Gilbert, Martin. The Righteous. p. 300.
  61. ^ Mordecal, Paldiel. The Path of the Righteous: Gentile Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust. p. 336.
  62. ^ Gilbert, Martin. The Righteous. p. 523.
  63. ^ "The Righteous Among The Nations". db.yadvashem.org. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  64. ^ "Adl commemorates holocaust day at city hall; honors albanian rescuer and recognizes jewish survivor". adl.org. Archived from the original on 2006-08-15. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  65. ^ "The Forward – News that Matters to American Jews". The Forward.
  66. ^ Green, David B. (2 April 2013). "Jewish Albanians Gain a Foothold". Haaretz.
  67. ^ Jussi Samuli Laitinen; Huijari vai pyhimys? Algoth Niskan osallisuus juutalaisten salakuljettamiseen Keski-Euroopassa vuoden 1938 aikana; Joensuun yliopisto; 2009
  68. ^ "Rikostarinoita historiasta: Salakuljettajien kuningas | Elävä arkisto" (in Finnish). yle.fi. Retrieved 2017-01-27.
  69. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; pp. 307–08
  70. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy; Collins; London; 1986; p. 466
  71. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; pp. 308, 311
  72. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 314
  73. ^ "CatholicHerald.co.uk » Niece astonished as Cause of Sister Katherine advances". catholicherald.co.uk.
  74. ^ Taylor, Jerome (2 June 2010). The Independent. London https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/british-nuns-who-saved-wartime-jews-on-path-to-sainthood-1988875.html. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  75. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 323
  76. ^ a b A litany of World War Two saints; Jerusalem Post; 11 April 2008.
  77. ^ "Father Arrigo Beccari and Dr. Giuseppe Moreali – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem". yadvashem.org.
  78. ^ "Don Gaetano Tantalo – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem". yadvashem.org.
  79. ^ "Italy. Historical Background – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem". yadvashem.org.
  80. ^ Paul O'Shea; A Cross Too Heavy; Rosenberg Publishing; p. 230 ISBN 978-1-877058-71-4
  81. ^ Anton Gill; An Honourable Defeat; A History of the German Resistance to Hitler; Heinemann; London; 1994; p. 58
  82. ^ William L. Shirer; The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; Secker & Warburg; London; 1960; pp. 234–35
  83. ^ "Pius XII – Early life and career". Britannica.com. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  84. ^ Pius XI (1937-03-14). "Pius XI, Mit Brennender Sorge (14/03/1937)". Vatican.va. Archived from the original on September 2, 2013. Retrieved 2013-08-18. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  85. ^ Martin Gilbert; Kristallnacht – Prelude to Disaster; HarperPress; 2006; p. 143
  86. ^ a b The Auschwitz Album
  87. ^ Martin Gilbert; Kristallnacht – Prelude to Disaster; HarperPress; 2006; p. 172
  88. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica : Reflections on the Holocaust
  89. ^ Pius XII, Summi Pontificatus; 48; October 1939 Archived July 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 308
  91. ^ [3]
  92. ^ a b Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 311
  93. ^ a b Martin Gilbert; The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy; Collins; London; 1986; pp. 622–23
  94. ^ a b c Hitler's Pope? Archived February 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine; Martin Gilbert; The American Spectator; 18/8/06
  95. ^ OCT. 18, 2000 (2000-10-18). "Pietro Palazzini, 88, Cardinal Honored for Holocaust Rescue". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2017-01-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  96. ^ "CatholicHerald.co.uk » Ten Catholic heroes of the Holocaust". catholicherald.co.uk.
  97. ^ "'Righteous Among the Nations'". New Oxford Review. 1944-04-07. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  98. ^ "How King Boris Kept Ahead Of Adolf Hitler". Catholic Herald Archive. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  99. ^ "The papers of Apostolic Visitor, Giuseppe Ramiro Marcone reveal the Holy See's commitment to helping Jews persecuted by Nazis". News.va. Archived from the original on October 21, 2015. Retrieved 2013-11-06. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  100. ^ a b Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust: 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 85
  101. ^ a b c Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 83
  102. ^ a b The Churches and the Deportation and Persecution of Jews in Slovakia; by Livia Rothkirchen; Vad Yashem.
  103. ^ a b Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 335
  104. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 337
  105. ^ Mary Gaffney. "Profile of Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty". Terrace Talk. Archived from the original on 23 October 2008. Retrieved 14 November 2008. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  106. ^ David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa (2000). Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype. Lexington Books. p. 111. ISBN 0-7391-0167-6.
  107. ^ a b David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa (2000). Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype. Lexington Books. p. 113. ISBN 0-7391-0167-6.
  108. ^ "Refuge in Latin America". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  109. ^ benardout
  110. ^ a b c Tainos Webdesign. "Sosúa-News". sosuanews.com.
  111. ^ https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/sosua.html
  112. ^ "Sosúa Virtual Museum". sosuamuseum.org.
  113. ^ Stefan Keller (2014-01-23). ""Akte Grüninger": Der Flüchtlingshelfer und die Rückkehr der Beamten" (in German). Die Wochenzeitung WOZ. Retrieved 2015-07-30.
  114. ^ "The Policeman who Lifted the Border Barrier". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2015-07-30.
  115. ^ "Sugihara not the only Japanese to save Jewish lives". Asahi shimbun. 2010-05-04. Retrieved 2010-10-20.
  116. ^ a b David G. Goodman, Masanori Miyazawa (2000). Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype. Lexington Books. p. 111. ISBN 0-7391-0167-6.
  117. ^ Johnson's aid to Leinsdorf is mentioned in Caro, Robert (1982). The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Path to Power. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 481–82. ISBN 0-394-49973-5. His aid to Leinsdorf and to the other refugees is mentioned in Woods, Randall (2006). LBJ: Architect of American Ambition. Free Press. pp. 139–40. ISBN 0-684-83458-8.
  118. ^ The Israeli Government's Official Website, by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  119. ^ "The Righteous Among Us", Yad Vashem Magazine
  120. ^ Rafael Angel Alfaro Pineda. "El Salvador and Schindler's List: A valid comparison", originally in La Prensa Gráfica Template:Es icon April 19, 1994, reproduced in English by the International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation.
  121. ^ El Salvador's Holocaust Hero Archived 2012-12-10 at archive.today
  122. ^ a b "From Zbaszyn to Manila, by Bonnie Harris, 2005". ucsb.edu.
  123. ^ Western People: Roundfort cabaret honours legendary Delia Murphy Archived 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  124. ^ Diplomáticos que salvaron judíos durante el Holocausto | Especiales | Israel en Tiempo de Noticias. Judaismo y Pueblo Judio a diario. El Reloj.com Archived 2005-02-06 at the Wayback Machine
  125. ^ "'Mexican Schindler' honored". latimes.
  126. ^ Voices on Antisemitism Interview with Fariborz Mokhtari Archived 2012-07-05 at the Wayback Machine from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
  127. ^ "Israel News – Haaretz Israeli News source". haaretz.com.
  128. ^ "Winton's Children – Index Page". just-powell.co.uk.
  129. ^ https://www.earnthenecklace.com/raymond-geist-wiki-american-consul-general-berlin-genius-tv-series/
  130. ^ Vatican's 'Scarlet Pimpernel' honoured; Majella O'Sullivan Irish Independent; 12 November 2012
  131. ^ Phayer, The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965, p. 88
  132. ^ Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust: 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; 2000; p. 86
  133. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 0-385-60100-X; pp. 206–07
  134. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 0-385-60100-X; p. 207
  135. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy; Collins; London; 1986; p. 451
  136. ^ a b Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 0-385-60100-X; p. 203
  137. ^ "Bishop Pavel Gojdic – The Righteous Among The Nations – Yad Vashem". yadvashem.org.
  138. ^ a b "Raoul Wallenberg – Diplomats". wallenberg.hu.
  139. ^ Hitler's Pope? Archived February 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine; by Sir Martin Gilbert, The American Spectator.
  140. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 230
  141. ^ Martin Gilbert; The Righteous – The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust; Doubleday; 2002; ISBN 038560100X; p. 114
  142. ^ Michael Phayer; The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; pp. 117–
  143. ^ a b "Wallenberg Emblekbizottsag". Wallenberg.hu. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
  144. ^ The Holocaust in Greece Archived 2013-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
  145. ^ uk:Ковч Омелян
  146. ^ "First Arab Nominated for Holocaust Honor". Associated Press. 2007-01-30. Archived from the original on 2007-08-31. Retrieved 2007-02-01.
  147. ^ Allen, Jerry C: Conrad Veidt: From Caligari to Casablanca. Boxwood Press, 1992.
  148. ^
    • Dietrich Bonhoeffer – a German Lutheran pastor who joined the Abwehr (a German military intelligence organization) which was also the center of the anti-Hitler resistance, was involved in operations to help German Jews escape to Switzerland. The Nazis arrested him, imprisoned him and on April 5, 1945, Bonhoeffer was hanged shorty before the end of the war.
    "Tisíc pět set zachráněných životů – Schindler nebyl sám" (in Czech). Denní Telegraf Praha. 1995-06-27. p. 5.
  149. ^ ЯРУГА: СЕЛО-ПРАВЕДНИК. Борис ХАНДРОС | История | Человек Archived 2012-06-30 at archive.today
  150. ^ Template:Pl icon Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, Wystawa „Sprawiedliwi wśród Narodów Świata”– 15 czerwca 2004 r., Rzeszów. „Polacy pomagali Żydom podczas wojny, choć groziła za to kara śmierci – o tym wie większość z nas.” (Exhibition "Righteous among the Nations." Rzeszów, June 15, 2004. Subtitled: "The Poles were helping Jews during the war – most of us already know that.") Last actualization November 8, 2008.
  151. ^ Template:Pl icon Jolanta Chodorska, ed., "Godni synowie naszej Ojczyzny: Świadectwa," Warsaw, Wydawnictwo Sióstr Loretanek, 2002, Part Two, pp. 161–62. ISBN 83-7257-103-1
  152. ^ Kalmen Wawryk, To Sobibor and Back: An Eyewitness Account (Montreal: The Concordia University Chair in Canadian Jewish Studies, and The Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, 1999), pp. 66–68, 71.
  153. ^ Ryszard Walczak (1997). Those Who Helped: Polish Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust. Warsaw: GKBZpNP–IPN. p. 51. ISBN 9788376290430. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  154. ^ Szymon Datner (1968). Las sprawiedliwych. Karta z dziejów ratownictwa Żydów w okupowanej Polsce. Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. p. 99.
  155. ^ Peggy Curran, "Decent people: Polish couple honored for saving Jews from Nazis," Montreal Gazette, December 10, 1994; Janice Arnold, "Polish widow made Righteous Gentile," The Canadian Jewish News (Montreal edition), January 26, 1995; Irene Tomaszewski and Tecia Werbowski, Żegota: The Council for Aid to Jews in Occupied Poland, 1942–1945, Montreal: Price-Patterson, 1999, pp. 131–32.
  156. ^ Template:Pl icon "Odznaczenia dla Sprawiedliwych," Magazyn Internetowy Forum 26,09,2007.
  157. ^ Milgram, Avraham. "Portugal, Salazar, and the Jews", Publication Date: March 20, 2012 ISBN 978-9653083875 p. 116
  158. ^ Ben-Zwi Kalischer – On The Way to the Land of Israel tr. from the German by Shalom Kramer (Hebrew) (Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 1945) pp. 174–82
  159. ^ Portugal-Europe's Crossroads – http://www.ushmm.org/online/film/display/detail.php?file_num=1103
  160. ^ "Jewish Labor and the Holocaust". nyu.edu.

Further reading