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(October
23, 2003) On October 26, Yad Vashem will recognize Hans von Dohnanyi
as a Righteous Among the Nations at an official ceremony in Berlin.
Yad Vashem recognizes as Righteous Among the Nations any Gentile
proven to have saved Jews during the Holocaust at risk to his or her
own life. Director of Yad Vashem’s Switzerland and German-speaking
Countries Desk, Arik Rav-On, will preside over the ceremony, in which
Israeli Consul to Germany Mordechay Lewy will present the award to von
Dohnanyi’s children Klaus von Dohnanyi, Barbara von Dohnanyi-Bayer,
and Christoph von Dohnanyi.
During
World War II, von Dohnanyi was conscripted to serve in the information
department of the German military intelligence organization (Abwehr).
In September 1942, von Dohnanyi initiated the rescue of 13 Jews under
cover of a clandestine Abwehr operation codenamed U-7. This operation
involved deployment of Abwehr agents on foreign soil. Von Dohnanyi
manipulated the operation’s shroud of secrecy and the Nazi bureaucracy
in order to smuggle the group of Jews (which included elderly,
crippled, and children) from Germany to safe harbor in Switzerland.
His real goal was to save them from deportation to Nazi death camps,
despite the great risk to his own life.
Von
Dohnanyi planned the entire rescue operation, and he made a secret
visit to Switzerland to verify that the group would be properly
received. He also had several secret meetings with a member of the
group, Friedrich Arnold, in order to coordinate the escape. Von
Dohnanyi had been acquainted with Arnold before the war, and he had
long sought a secure way in which to save him and his family.
Von
Dohnanyi was later arrested by the Gestapo on suspicion of anti-Nazi
activity. He was initially charged with foreign currency violations,
which he performed in order to transfer the rescued Jews’ funds to a
Swiss bank. As part of the Nazis’ final purge of anti-Reich suspects,
Von Dohnanyi was executed in April 1945.
In
accordance with its eligibility criteria, Yad Vashem’s committee for
the Righteous Among the Nations decided on June 17 to honor Hans von
Dohnanyi as a Righteous Among the Nations. The decision was made on
the basis of the evidence proving his heroic actions, including
testimonies by members of the rescued group and other knowledgeable
sources.
A person
recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations is awarded a specially
minted medal bearing his name, a certificate of honor, and the
privilege of his/her name being added to those on the Wall of Honor in
the Garden of the Righteous at Yad Vashem. The awards are distributed
to the rescuers or their next of kin in ceremonies in Israel, or in
their countries of residence through Israel's diplomatic
representatives.
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