In
Tribute: A HERO FOR OUR TIME. 3Cont'd.
A
gnes
Adachi recalls the night when she and her co-workers needed to complete
about 2,000 Schutzpasses and deliver them before six a.m. when the Nazis
would be rounding up several thousands of Jewish women. She tells of working
by candlelight in a villa on the outskirts of Budapest. Wallenberg came in
and very calmly announced that the villa next door was the Gestapo
headquarters. He then smilingly assured his staff that they must continue
their work and not be alarmed. The Schutzpasses were completed, and each was
delivered on foot before six a.m. According to Mrs. Adachi: "He made a game
out of outfoxing the Nazis, but he played it with the utmost seriousness.
Most of all, he was like a big brother one looked up to, and he had the most
beautiful eyes that I have ever seen. They were so beautiful and they saw
everything." Wallenberg's next step was crucial to ultimate success. In a
section of Budapest designated by the Hungarian government as the
"International Ghetto", Wallenberg purchased thirty buildings where he flew
Swedish flags next to the Jewish Star. These buildings, and others for which
he was able to negotiate, were given the full protection of the Swedish
government. In these protected houses, Wallenberg set up hospitals, schools,
soup kitchens, and a special shelter for 8,000 children whose parents had
already been deported or killed. Generally, the Swedish flag and the
passports held by those living in the houses were protection enough.
If
his spies told him that a raid was being planned by the Nazis or their
Hungarian counterparts, young, blond Jewish men living in the houses would
be dressed in Nazi uniforms and put outside to "guard" the houses.
Occasionally, however, all efforts failed. On Christmas Day, 1944, a gang of
Hungarian Nazis entered a protective Swedish children's shelter and
seventy-eight children were machined gunned and beaten with rifle butts. All
died. Because of Wallenberg's swift action in setting up shelters that
offered care and protection, the other neutral legations and the
International Red Cross also followed and helped greatly to expand the
number of protected houses.
The article
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