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"Righteous Among the Nations"

Green Gaia

Veteran Member
Israeli Government Designates Unitarians as "Righteous Among the Nations" for Rescue Work During Holocaust


http://www.uua.org/news/2005/051206_YadVashem.html


(Boston, December 6, 2005) The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee announced today that the Israeli government has designated the late Rev. Waitstill Sharp Martha Sharp Cogan as "Righteous Among the Nations," an honor conferred to individuals who extended aid to rescue Jews during the Holocaust. To date, over 20,000 individuals have been named as "Righteous Among the Nations," but until the Sharps were so designated, the honor had only been bestowed on one American, Varian Fry.


Unitarians and Universalists watched along with the rest of the world as Hitler and fascism took hold in Europe. As the UU Service Committee notes in a piece on its history and founding, "Between l934 and 1938, the Reverends Charles Joy and Robert Dexter (both members of the American Unitarian Association staff) traveled abroad and reported back regularly on conditions among the refugees." Although delegates to the 1933 and 1936 General Assembly of the AUA had passed resolutions decrying the persecution of Jews in Europe by the Nazis, the outcry went unheeded by the US government." In October, 1938, Czechoslovakia fell. American Unitarians, who held close ties to Czech Unitarian congregations and to the Rev. Norbert Capek, were stunned and in December of that year, the Board of Directors of the AUA agreed to a plan for a "service mission to Czechoslovakia."

In February of 1939, Martha Sharp and the Rev. Waitstill Sharp (minister of the Unitarian Universalist Society of Wellesley Hills, MA) sailed for Europe as representatives of the American Unitarian Association on what was described as an 'exploratory visit.' They arrived in Prague as Nazi troops were marching into the city, which held 250,000 refugees. Working independently, Martha interacted primarily with refugees; her persistent efforts enabled many to cross borders safely. Meanwhile Waitstill set up an underground escape route from the city about which little is known to this day.

Largely as a result of the Sharp's courageous efforts, the Unitarian Service Committee was established in May 1940 as a standing committee of the AUA. The nascient organization decided on a mission that would orient it firmly on the side of promoting democracy outside of the United States – a controversial decision during a time of US isolationism.

The Sharp's rescue list focused on intellectuals and anti-Nazi political leaders as well as children. In August l940, the Sharps returned to the US from Europe, barely escaping arrest and detention. Later, after the fall of almost all of Europe, they sailed again for Marseilles and then, Lisbon. There, Martha Sharp arranged for 29 children and 10 adults, refugees from Nazi-occupied countries, to set sail for the US. They thus escaped internment under the Vichy French government, which later deported hundreds of thousands to Nazi death camps.

The numbers of people rescued by the Unitarian Service Committee during and after the war years (often in collaboration with other agencies) has been estimated to be between 1,000 and 3,000.

Yad Vashem (so named from a passage in the book of Isaiah), the Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority, was established in 1953 by an act of the Israeli Knesset. Since its inception, Yad Vashem has been entrusted with documenting the history of the Jewish people during the Holocaust period, preserving the memory and story of each of the six million victims, and imparting the legacy of the Holocaust for generations to come through its archives, library, school, museums and recognition of the Righteous Among the Nations.
Located on Har Hazikaron (the Mount of Remembrance) in Jerusalem, Yad Vashem is a complex of tree-studded walkways leading to museums, exhibits, archives, monuments, sculptures, and memorials. Since 1963, a commission has been charged with awarding the title "Righteous Among the Nations" to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. The awarding of this honor to the Sharps is largely due to the relentless work of their grandchildren, Artemis and Misha Joukowsky.
A person recognized as "Righteous Among the Nations" is awarded a specially minted medal inscribed with the individual's name. Awards are distributed to the rescuers or their next of kin in ceremonies in Israel or in their countries of residence. The Sharps' courage was honored in November at a ceremony held at Brown University Hillel (Brown was Martha Sharp's alma mater as well as that of her daughter and grandson, Misha). Waitstill and Martha Sharp's names will be inscribed among those similarly honored by Israel in the Garden of the Righteous at Yad Vashem in June, 2006.
For further information:



Sermons on Waitstill and Martha Sharp's courageous actions:


Media Coverage on the Sharps and on conferring of "Righteous Among the Nations" honor:


 

Jayhawker Soule

-- untitled --
Premium Member
Walking through Yad Vashem was intensely difficult. Wisely, the section on "Righteous Among the Nations" is toward the end of that walk, so you break into the outdoors, tears streaming down your face, but with some sense of the goodness of humanity.

May Martha Sharp and the Rev. Waitstill Sharp be remembered for what they tell us about our own potential.
 

Green Gaia

Veteran Member
Deut. 10:19 said:
Walking through Yad Vashem was intensely difficult.

I can imagine. I don't remember where it was, but I was about 11 or 12 at the time, and with a group I visited some sort of museum or exhibit that had a wing dedicated to the victims of the Holocaust with walls and walls of pictures and maps and the like. I knew what the Holocaust was but nothing had prepared me for those pictures. Still I find it hard to watch any movie or documentary on the horrors of the Holocaust even without a connection to the event itself, other than being human.

Some people like to ask the "ethical" question, "Would you have killed Hitler if you had the chance?" While that may be an interesting question to some to ask and analyze the answers based on what we know happened. But I think the more probing question to ask people is, "Would you have helped the Jews at your own personal risk?" Those deemed as "Righteous Among the Nations" and all others who at great personal risk help those who so desperately need help should be all of humanity's heros.
 

Nozem

Member
Thank you for posting this message, very informative. Yes, one thinks of those people who took great risk to themselves to shelter Jewish people and others who were in hiding from the Third Reich, also others who went hungry to donate their meagre rations to people they knew who were in hiding. Just as there collaborators with the enemy there were also groups of individuals who were defiant. It makes one feel both humble but uplifted to know that there were people who refused to co-operate with the horrors of the Third Reich.
 
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