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Varian Fry (1907–1967)

Autor von Assignment: Rescue

8+ Werke 314 Mitglieder 5 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 2 Lesern

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Bildnachweis: Varian Fry in 1967

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Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Fry, Varian
Rechtmäßiger Name
Fry, Varian Mackey
Andere Namen
FRY, Varian Mackey
FRY, Varian
Geburtstag
1907-10-15
Todestag
1967-09-13
Begräbnisort
Cimetière de Green-Wood, Brooklyn, New York, Etats-Unis
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
New York, New York, USA
Sterbeort
Connecticut, USA
Todesursache
Hémorragie cérébrale
Wohnorte
New York, New York, USA
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Marseille, France
Villa Air-Bel, Marseille, France
Ausbildung
Harvard College
Berufe
journalist
editor
Holocaust rescuer
Beziehungen
Hirschman, Albert O. (colleague)
Fittko, Lisa (colleague)
Gold, Mary Jayne (colleague)
Kirstein, Lincoln (friend)
Organisationen
Emergency Rescue Committee
Preise und Auszeichnungen
Yad Vashem Martryrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority "Righteous Among the Nations"
Righteous among the Nations
Legion d'Honneur (Chevalier, 1967)
Kurzbiographie
In August 1940, after Nazi Germany's invasion of France in World War II, Varian Fry went to Marseille on behalf of a group he had helped found called the Emergency Rescue Committee. He traveled with $3,000 in cash taped to his leg and a list of some 200 Jews and other individuals -- artists, political dissidents, and intellectuals -- in great peril from the Nazis. As a researcher and reporter in Berlin in 1935, he had seen Jews assaulted in the street, and knew what would happen if he didn't act. He and a small group of volunteers took up residence at a rundown villa where they hid people temporarily, and set about obtaining false passports and arranging escape routes to smuggle people to safety. By the time Fry was deported by the Vichy government 13 months later, he had saved thousands of lives, among them Marc Chagall, Marcel Duchamp, and Hannah Arendt. In 1945, he published a book about his time in France called Surrender on Demand. In 1968, Scholastic, which markets books mainly to young people, published a new paperback edition under the title Assignment: Rescue. Fry was the author and co-author of numerous other books. Shortly before his death in 1967, the French government awarded him the Croix de Chevalier of the Legion d'Honneur, France's highest decoration of merit. It was the only official recognition he received during his lifetime. In 1994, he became the first American to be named Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem.

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Varian Fry is a World War II hero that few know about but everyone should. He went to France in June 1940 for a month, stayed over a year, and rescued close to 2,000 people from the Nazis -- people who included Marc Chagall, Wanda Landowska, Andre Breton, among many others. He wasn't trained as and never had worked as a spy or secret agent, but when he arrived in France he found that legal means for getting these people out of France were few, and they became fewer each day.

This edition was published in conjunction with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. I believe the intended audience for this edition was school children, and I also believed they cut a considerable amount from the original. That original, on the other hand, was no where to be found on the internet except maybe for a collector's price.… (mehr)
 
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dvoratreis | May 22, 2024 |
"Nell'agosto del 1940 lasciai New York per una missione segreta in Francia, una missione che molti dei miei amici consideravano pericolosa. Partii con le tasche piene di elenchi di uomini e donne che dovevo soccorrere e con la testa piena di suggerimenti su come farlo". (fonte: Google Books)
 
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MemorialeSardoShoah | Apr 27, 2020 |
Esta es la historia de Varian Fry y cómo ayudó a escapar de la Gestapo a intelectuales y artistas como Bretón, Alma Mahler, Mann, Duchamp, Chagal......
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pedrolopez | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 1, 2016 |
"The French Government is obliged to surrender upon demand all Germans* named by the German Government in France, as well as in French possessions, Colonies, Protectorate Territories and Mandates" From Article XIX of the Franco-German Armistice

*"Germans" came to include anyone in territories the Nazis had conquered, and indeed anyone they wanted.

After reading Anna Seghers's Transit], and learning that she escaped from Marseille to Martinique with the help of Varian Fry, I realized that I'd had his book on my shelves for probably 15 years, and that it seemed like a good time to finally read it.

When the Nazis invaded Paris in June 1940, Varian Fry was a 32-year-old journalist and former classics major who had visited Germany in 1935 and been horrified by the Nazis even in those early years. Three days after the French surrender, the Emergency Rescue Committee was formed; its mission was to rescue many of the European artists, writers, musicians, and intellectuals who had initially fled from all corners of Europe to France and who now needed to flee France as well. Varian Fry agreed to go to Marseille to help get them out, believing that it would take him three weeks to contact the people on the ERC's list and not much longer to get them out with the help he believed he would receive from the US consulate in Marseille.

This is the story of the 13 months Fry spent in Marseille and its environs, before finally being expelled with the aid of the US State Department. During that time, he and his colleagues helped some 4000 people and were able to send some 2000 safely out of France. These people included some of the foremost artists, intellectuals, and labor and political leaders of the time, people such as André Breton, Max Ernst, Franz Werfel, Heinrich Mann, Victor Serge, among many others. To do this, he found himself working 18-hour days and doing whatever was necessary, including buying passports and visas, working with gangsters and forgers and money changers, as well as with representatives of the British military, searching for boats that could take people away, and generally staying one step ahead of the French police and the Gestapo (which not "officially" active in unoccupied Marsellle). Fry introduces us to the diverse group of people who helped in both his above-ground and clandestine activities, and to a who's who of European artists, intellectuals, and anti-Nazis.

More exciting than spy fiction because it is real, this book is also the story of a man who found himself unalterably changed by the situation he found himself in and who then found the courage to face incredible danger and undertake activities that he probably never dreamed he would ever engage in, all because they were necessary to get people out. In fact, the afterword to the edition I read (written by curators of the exhibit on Fry that was the opening exhibit at US Holocaust Museum), quotes a letter Fry wrote to his wife on his way home from Europe in which he says "I do not think I will ever be quite the same person I was when I kissed you goodbye . . . For the experiences of ten, fifteen, and even twenty years have been pressed into one. Sometimes I feel I have lived a whole life (and one to which I have no right) since I first walked down the monumental staircase of the Gare St. Charles in Marseille and timidly took a small back room at the Hotel Splendide . . ."

Fry started writing this book after he returned, but didn't end up publishing it until 1945. He kept no notes while he was in France, and in fact he frequently mentions burning papers just ahead of police visits, but his experiences must have been indelibly recorded in his brain, because the people and his activities come alive in his writing. One of the parts I enjoyed was the way some French and other officials unofficially helped Fry and the refugees, or at least looked the other way. In one amusing episode, a sentry at the Spanish border saw the paperwork Golo Mann, who had just climbed over a mountain to enter Spain with his uncle Heinrich Mann, and realized he was the son of Thomas Mann. Of course, when the sentry asked them about this, they feared being on a Gestapo list, but the sentry said he was honored to meet the son of "so great a man" and then sent for a car to come and get them.

Shamefully, the US government did not fully support Fry in his activities, which he found shocking; this got worse as time went on, and finally the State Department collaborated in Fry's being expelled from France. The US became more concerned about letting political "undesirables" into the country than with protecting the intellectual and artistic elite of Europe. Fry came to believe that people in the US didn't fully understand what was going on in Europe, and that he had to write this book to make them see. In his original introduction, which was not published in 1945 but which is included as an appendix to my edition, he wrote:

"I have tried -- God knows I have tried -- to get back into the mood of American life since I left France for the last time. But it doesn't work. There is only one way to try and that is the way I am going to try now. If I can get it all out, put it all down just as it happened, if I can make others see it and feel it as I did, then maybe I can sleep soundly again at night. . . . Those ghosts won't stop haunting me until I have done their bidding. They are the ghosts of the living who do not want to die. Go back, they said, go back and make America understand, make Americans understand before it is too late."

Varian Fry was the first American to be recognized by Yad Vashem, Israel's memorial to the Holocaust, as
"Righteous Among the Nations," a non-Jew who saved Jews during the Holocaust.
… (mehr)
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rebeccanyc | 2 weitere Rezensionen | May 25, 2013 |

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