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FRONT PAGE CONTRIBUTOR

Today is the 66th anniversary of the rescue of the Danish Jews.

If you don’t know the story, let me sum it up for you: at the end of August, 1943 the country of Denmark was finally fully taken over by Nazi Germany.  This meant, among other things, that the Jewish population of Denmark (roughly 8,000) was now in deadly danger: the Danish government had been, up to that point, politely, respectfully, and absolutely inflexibly refusing to allow Nazi Germany to persecute its Jewish citizens.  While the story that the King of Denmark himself wore the yellow star is not true, what is true is that no Danish Jew did – and if you think that this is a minor point, well, no, it’s not: things like the star were the tools used to isolate Jews from the larger community, thus making it possible to go on with sequestering them into ghettos, then taking them away to be murdered.

So.  When the Danish government was taken out of the picture as an independent entity, the Nazis suddenly had a clear hand to take away the Danish Jews on October 1, 1943 – only a (German) diplomat got word of the planned deportation, and on September 28, 1943, tipped off the Danes.  Who then proceeded to smuggle their Jewish population out of the country and to Sweden in an ad hoc, spur-of-the-moment rescue mission.  The few that the Nazis swept up continued to be protected by the Danes; in marked contrast to other nations, Denmark constantly raised a stink about Danish Jews, resulting in their being transferred to a relatively safe concentration camp and allowed Red Cross supplies.  It is estimated that the actions of Denmark saved roughly 95% of their Jewish population – and this, I think, says more about the stubborn decency of the Danes than anything else:

Denmark was also different and special in another way. Almost everywhere else in Europe, returning Jews found their homes had been broken into, and everything of value stolen. When the Danish Jews returned , they discovered that their homes, pets, gardens and personal belongings were cared for by their neighbors.

What with the various thiings going on in and to the USA right now, it might surprise some of you to hear that the President is actually going to Copenhagen (capital of Denmark) this week. To plead for a Chicago venue for the 2016 Olympics.

[redacted] the Olympics.

Moe Lane

Crossposted to Moe Lane.

COMMENTS

  • bk

    you’d think Obama would have announced a suspension of all military aid to Israel or something, like he did to Poland recently on a significant anniversary date.

  • Vladimir

    ..but then, I’m not the President & I don’t have a State Department working for me.

  • E Pluribus Unum

    I never knew this, and I confess to not having a particularly high opinion of Denmark.

    Recalibrating now.

    And my sentiments regarding the campaigner in chief echo yours.

  • writeblock

    Italy was another country that protected Jews. Dorothy Rabinowitz in a WSJ column stated that it was a country “full of Schindlers.” The government, the military in particular, in most cases simply ignored German requests to round up Jews. It wasn’t until the Nazis took over the country late in the war that persecutions began in earnest. But by then most Italian Jews were hidden in private homes and in convents and seminaries.

  • http://www.theminorityreportblog.com/blog/loren_heal Socrates

    The Olympic ideal system is a multilevel game of outpeacemanship. On one level, countries get to show national pride in a completely friendly way.

    On another level, the nations replace war with sport, competing against one another in athletic contests rather than military ones.

    On still another level, there is the utopian dream of worldwide peace though holding hands and noting with unalloyed pleasure the diversity of ways to ask, “Aren’t we all special?”

    Having seen the disgrace that the opening ceremonies have become, I’m pretty sure it doesn’t work on any level.

  • writeblock

    (Ms. Rabinowitz Wall Street Journal @ 22, December, 1993)
    AN ARMY OF SCHINDLERS FROM ITALY

    By Dorothy Rabinowitz

    Oskar Schindler, flawed hero of Steven Spielberg’s monumental 11m, “Schindler’s list,” came to Poland a profiteer and ended up a rescuer of many hundreds of Jewish lives. His story’s entry into the world, via Mr. Spielberg’s justly celebrated film, calls to mind a number of other unlikely rescuers of whose exploits little has yet been heard, however much they are known to historians.

    I haw in mind, namely, Hitler?s allies, the Italians, whose government ministries and army and highest political circles moved heaven and earth to see to it that not a single Jew was deported tram Italy. They schemed, they plotted, they resorted to the wiliest of strategies and delaying efforts-including the invention of the most wonderfully complicated “census-taking” known to man – to ensure that no Jews under their govemance fell into German hands. Not for nothing does the history of these plots sometimes read like farce.

    None of this can mitigate the facts of the unspeakable fate that ultimately befell some 8,000 Italian Jews when the Germans finally marched in-nor the harsh anti-Jewish legislation Mussolini introduced in 1938. Still, there is no doubt that, were it not for what the Germans so bitterly described, in their cables, as the peculiar “Italian
    attitude” of protection toward the Jews, far more than the 20% of the Italian Jewish population that was annihilated would haw been shipped to their deaths.

    Unlike countries like Bulgaria and, for a time at least, France-which resisted deporting their Jewish nationals but were prepared to deliver their foreign-bom Jews-the Italians refused to deport Jews, period.

    Their refusal (like that of Hitler?s other temporary ally. the Finns)
    was based on a full awareness of what awaited any Jew deported for “resettlement.” Berlin was naturally was naturally bitter over this intransigence. The telegrams from Bureau IV of the Reich Security Head Office-command post for the final Solution – flew thick and fast with inquiries as to when Italy could be expected to begin handling its Jews OWL The answer from the Italians was an unbending – if silent “Never.” And indeed, so long as Fascist Italy remained independent, and until its occupation by the Germans in 1943, the answer was the same.

    Not only would the Italian government – reflecting the popular attitude
    of the citizenry at large – resist deportation, its army and consuls undertook extraordinary efforts to rescue Jews in their zones of
    occupation. As an Axis partner, Italy’s forces occupied a large sector
    of Greece, part of Yugoslavia and eight sectors of southeastern France,
    including Nice.

    The attitude of the occupying Italians with regard to Germany?s
    extermination plans for the Jews was made immaculately clear, to the
    great distress and confusion of the Germans and their French allies.
    For, as soon as the Vichy police in these areas busied themselves rounding up Jews for 8nest and deportation, the Italian military and
    foreign ministry demanded – and obtained – a stop to the arrests and
    deportations .
    In Annecy, the French police, who had rounded up a trainload of Jews for deportation, found them Selves looking at the barrels of guns trained on
    them by soldiers of the Italian Fourth Army. Yielding to this forceful
    persuasion, the French released the Jews.

    In Salonika as elsewhere, as historians Leon Poliakov and Jacques Sabile
    document, the Italians offered more than tolerant protection. In
    Greece, the Italian consuls and military – witness to the brutal
    deportations taking place before their eyes – busied them selves handing
    out phony certificates of “Italian nationality” to the hunted Jews.
    Italian officers spirited Jews away to safety on military trains and, as
    survivors haves attested, they undertook, in every possible way, to cheer
    them on and assure them of their protection. In Poland, Italian troops
    gave aid and comfort to the hunted Jews.

    In Nice, the Italian commandant stationed carabinieri outside the Jewish
    communal center and synagogue to make certain that Vichy police could
    not enter to make arrests. Elsewhere in southeastern France where the
    Vichyite police (on orders from the Germans) decreed that the Jews be
    made to wear the yellow star, the Italian generals countermanded the order. It was. they answered, “inconsistent with the dignity of the Italian army” that in areas of its control Jews should be made to wear
    “this stigmatizing badge.”

    The dignity of the army. Such a quaintly improbable ring the words have
    in the context of the unrivaled honors being inflicted daily by the
    armies of the Reich and their accomplices. They’ were flawed heroes of a
    kind different from Schindler, these servants of Mussolini’s Fascist
    state. It has been argued that there were elements of political concern
    in Rome’s refusal to cooperate in the murder of the Jews – but no one
    can attribute anything but humanitarian revulsion at the Germans’
    policies in the activates of the Italians who strove so assiduously to
    save lives in the territories they occupied.

    What there was in the character of the Italians that made their
    resistance to mass murder so implacable, so different from that of the
    \/ichyite French, is a question we may ponder – and one- for whose
    existence we can be grateful

    Ms. Rabinowitz Wall Street Journal, 22, December, 1993

  • E Pluribus Unum

    Again, something I did not know.

  • http://www.meetup.com/dcworksforus Kenny Solomon

    No matter what the left tries to do, history is history and we will not allow it to be re-written for political correctness, racial or religious bias.

    Cheers !

  • throwback59

    the actions of the Italians & Finns show that while all Nazis are Fascists, not all Facist are Nazis.

  • hickorystick

    I had known about the Italian effort. I think the Pope at this time probably got a bum rap. There is a park in Israel commemorating the WWII Pope. Denmark I didn’t know about. Not bad for a bunch of Vikings of old.

  • jcincy

    As a kid I had the great honor of hearing Corrie Ten Boom speak about her experiences aiding the Dutch Underground in hiding Jews from the Nazis. (Sadly, at the time, I didn’t realize what a tremendous blessing this was).

    You can find a summary of her story here:

    http://www.corrietenboom.com/history.htm

    In Cincinnati we are blessed to have Hebrew Union College and their understated but moving holocaust museum. If you are ever graced with the opportunity to visit my city, this is a treasure worth seeing.

    http://www.holocaustandhumanity.org/chhe_visit.html

  • Warrior

    is Corrie Ten Boom’s book, “The Hiding Place”.

    Also, “Miracle at Midnight” is a rather banal, but informative, TV movie dramatizing the Danish rescue of the Jews. It can be rented from Netflix and probably found at the local video store…stars Sam Waterston

  • Warrior

    student of WWII and I had not heard of the Italian refusal to send Jews to their deaths.

    The weren’t quite so humane to the Abyssinians in the ’30′s however…