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Defense Professional
Join Date: 04-15-07
Location: Virginia
Country:
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Bulgarian Jews Saved from Hitler
This was emailed to me by a firend. Never heard of this slice of WWII history. I was wondering if this was a relatively new revelation or if it's was well known already to history buffs.
SUBJECT: Beyond Hitler's Grasp !!
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A great many Jews know the story of how the Danes rescued 8,000 Jews
from the Nazi's by smuggling them to Sweden in fishing boats.
Very few Jews, know the story of how all 50,000 Bulgarian Jews were
saved. Not a single Bulgarian Jew was deported to the death camps,
due to the heroism of many Bulgarians of every walk of life, up to and
including the King and the Patriarch of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church.
In 1999, Abraham Foxman, the National Director of the Anti Defamation
League flew with a delegation to Sophia to meet the Bulgarian Prime
Minister. He gave the Prime Minister the first Bulgarian language copy
of a remarkable book, "Beyond Hitler's Grasp," written in 1998, by
Michael Bar Oar, a professor at Emory University.
(A Bulgarian Jew who had migrated to Israel and then to the USA ).
This book documents the rescue effort in detail. The ADL paid for and
shipped 30,000 copies to Bulgaria , so that the population could partake
in the joy of learning about this heroic facet of their history.
This story is clearly the last great secret of the Holocaust era. The story
was buried by the Bulgarian Communists, until their downfall in 1991.
All records were sealed, since they didn't wish to glorify the King, or the
Church, or the non Communist parliamentarians, who at great personal
risk, stood up to the Germans. And the Bulgarian Jewish Community,
45,000 of whom went to Israel after the War, were busy building new
lives, and somehow the story remained untold.
Bulgaria is a small country and at the outset of the War they had 8 million
people. They aligned themselves with the Nazi's in hopes of recapturing
Macedonia from Yugoslavia and Thrace from Greece . Both provinces were
stripped from them, after W.W.I. In late 1942 the Jews of Selonica were
shipped north through Bulgaria , on the way to the death camps, in sealed
box cars. The news of this inhumanity was a hot topic of conversation. Then,
at the beginning of 1943, the pro Nazi Bulgarian government was informed
that all 50,000 Bulgarian Jews would be deported in March. The Jews had
been made to wear yellow stars and were highly visible.
As the date for the deportation got closer, the agitation got greater.
Forty-three ruling party members of Parliament walked out in protest.
Newspapers denounced what was about to happen. In addition, the Patriarch
of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Archbishop Krill, threatened to lie down
on
the railroad tracks. Finally, King Boris III forbade the deportation. Since
Bulgaria was an ally of Germany , and the Germans were stretched militarily,
they had to wrestle with the problem of how much pressure they could
afford to apply. They decided to pass.
Several points are noteworthy. The Bulgarian Jews were relatively
unreligious
and did not stand apart from the local populace by virtue of garb, or rites.
They
were relatively poor by comparison to Jews in other countries, and they
lived
in integrated neighbor-hoods. Additionally, the Bulgarians had many
minorities,
Armenians, Turks, Greeks, and Gypsies, in addition to Jews.
There was no concept of racism in that culture. The bottom line here is that
Bulgarians saw Bulgarian-Jews as Bulgarians, and not as Jews. And, being
a small country, like Denmark , where there was a closeness of community
that is often missing in larger countries. So, here was a bright spot that
we
can point to as example of what should have been.
The most famous of those saved was a young graduate of the Bulgarian
Military
Academy . When he arrived in Israel , he changed his name to Moshe
Dayan.....
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To be Truly ignorant, Man requires an Education. (Plato)
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