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aquart

(69,014 posts)
Tue Mar 6, 2012, 12:04 AM Mar 2012

Who Was Harry Bingham And Why Is He Getting A Stamp ?

I just got this in my email from a cousin. I tend not to pass such things on. But this time...



"Just an interesting piece of evidence of the curious behavior of the Roosevelt administration toward the Jews during WWII :-

A few months ago, Secretary of State Colin Powell gave a posthumous award for "constructive dissent" to Hiram (or Harry) Bingham, IV. For over fifty years, the State Department resisted any attempt to honor Bingham. For them he was an insubordinate member of the US diplomatic service, a dangerous maverick who was eventually demoted. Now, after his death, he has been officially recognized as a hero.

Bingham came from an illustrious family. His father (whom the fictional character Indiana Jones was based) was the archeologist who unearthed the Inca City of Machu Picchu, Peru, in 1911. Harry entered the US diplomatic service and, in 1939, was posted to Marseilles, France, as American Vice-Consul.

The USA was then neutral and, not wishing to annoy Marshal Petain's puppet Vichy regime, President Roosevelt's government ordered its representatives in Marseilles not to grant visas to any Jews. Bingham found this policy immoral and, risking his career, did all in his power to undermine it.

In defiance of his bosses in Washington, he granted over 2,500 USA visas to Jewish and other refugees, including the artists Marc Chagall and Max Ernst and the family of the writer Thomas Mann. He also sheltered Jews in his Marseilles home, and obtained forged identity papers to help Jews in their dangerous journeys across Europe. He worked with the French underground to smuggle Jews out of France into Franco's Spain or across the Mediterranean and even contributed to their expenses out of his own pocket. In 1941, Washington lost patience with him. He was sent toArgentina, where later he continued to annoy his superiors by reporting on the movements of Nazi war criminals.

Eventually, he was forced out of the American diplomatic service completely. Bingham died almost penniless in 1988. Little was known of his extraordinary activities until his son found some letters in his belongings after his death. He has now been honored by many groups and organizations including the United Nations and the State of Israel.

PLEASE honor his memory and re-send this."

I had no idea. I'll buy those stamps.

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Who Was Harry Bingham And Why Is He Getting A Stamp ? (Original Post) aquart Mar 2012 OP
Its was 2006...I wonder if they will bump up the stamp it was 39 cents. Historic NY Mar 2012 #1
In the same vein - a book about people who listened to their hearts csziggy Mar 2012 #2

csziggy

(34,136 posts)
2. In the same vein - a book about people who listened to their hearts
Tue Mar 6, 2012, 12:41 AM
Mar 2012
'Beautiful Souls' Who Listened To Their Hearts
March 1, 2012

When the Nazis came to power in Austria in 1938, Jews living in Austria headed for the Swiss border. Paul Gruninger, a Swiss police commander on the border between the two countries, refused to enforce the law barring Jewish refugees from entering Switzerland.

Instead of turning them back, he falsified their documents to let them in and saved many lives. When Gruninger's actions were discovered, he was fired.

Gruninger's heroic journey is one of the stories examined in journalist Eyal Press' Beautiful Souls: Saying No, Breaking Ranks, and Heeding the Voice of Conscience in Dark Times.

"There was nothing about this man, on the surface at least, that would have led you to pick him out and think: Here is the guy who would do this defiant thing, who would break the law in his own country," Press tells NPR's John Donvan.

More, including the interview and an excerpt from the book: http://www.npr.org/2012/03/01/147730096/beautiful-souls-unlikely-resisters-inspired-to-stand


This sounds like an excellent book for these times - stories about people who cared more about doing the right thing than how they would be regarded by others. I haven't read it, but the interview with the author was very good.
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