Showing posts with label aristides de sousa mendes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aristides de sousa mendes. Show all posts

2013/07/20

 Na raîz do Aristides — em Cabanas de Viriato, Viseu

(Installation by Eric Moed. Photos by Elisabete Pires Monteiro-July 13, 2013) 
 




2011/05/05

Aristides de Sousa Mendes


By Tom Harvey

The Salt Lake Tribune
First published May 01 2011 05:47PM
Updated May 2, 2011 12:52AM

Members of the Jewish community and others in Utah remembered a Portuguese consul in France during World War II who saved the lives of several people who are now state residents and tens of thousands of other Jews trying to escape the Nazis.

Speakers on Sunday at Holocaust Remembrance Day at the Utah State Capitol Rotunda told about the exploits of Aristides de Sousa Mendes, who was called an "unsung hero" for saving the lives of 30,000 Jews who faced possible extermination in Hitler's death camps.

One was Daniel Mattis, a University of Utah physics professor, who told a crowd of about 250 people that he was 7 years old when his family was forced to flee. They had visas for Brazil but needed some way to first get out of France.

Then someone told his father that the Portuguese consul was giving out visas in Bordeaux, France, and from him the family obtained visas for Portugal, then went to Brazil and eventually to the United States.

In 1980, Mattis said he and his wife, Noemi, a psychiatrist, moved to Utah. In 1996, the couple attended a show of slides and movies about "Unsung Heroes of World War II."

"One of them was Aristides de Sousa Mendes, the man who had saved our lives," said Mattis.

From there, a foundation was born to research the history of Sousa Mendes and his role in saving thousands of lives. An exhibition remembering Sousa Mendes is in place at the Marriott Library at the University of Utah through the end of this month.

A grandson of his now lives in Salt Lake City and was introduced at the ceremony. A foundation is trying to name and locate those whose lives Sousa Mendes saved and their descendants.

The Sunday ceremony included the lighting of six candles to commemorate the 6 million Jews murdered during World War II. The lighting was followed by a minute of silence.

Rabbi Benny Zippel, of the Congregation Bais Menchem/Chabad, referred in a prayer to the Jewish belief from "the first murder in history that an individual is a whole world."

"This is a potent message in the wake of the Holocaust," Zippel said. "Each individual of the 6 million Jews and beyond was a whole world. The Nazis did not just wipe out one-third of Jewry, the Nazis destroyed the world 6 million times."

Gov. Gary Herbert was on the program to read a proclamation but instead was represented by Mike Mower, his deputy chief of staff. The Utah Valley University Choir provided music for the event.
Copyright 2011 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://www.sltrib. com/sltrib/ news/51729959- 78/holocaust- shapiro-utah- lives.html. csp

2011/04/02

The bravery of a Portuguese war hero resonates today

The neglected house of Aristides de Sousa Mendes stands as a reminder that we must not forget his sacrifice in saving thousands from the Nazis


sousa
The decaying Sousa Mendes mansion. Photograph: Mark Fonseca Rendeiro

"So you've seen our shame, our disgrace?" Those were the first words from an older gentleman wearing a sash along the parade route. It is carnival in Cabanas de Viriato, the ancestral home of Portuguese second world war hero Aristides de Sousa Mendes, and I'm walking alongside Francisco Antonio Campos, director of the local philharmonic.

He sounds frustrated as he stares in any direction to avoid looking at theghastly abandoned mansion looming over us in the town square. More than 70 years since Sousa Mendes, a diplomat assigned to the consulate in Bordeaux, saved over 30,000 people from the concentration camps of Nazi Germany, his story remains largely unknown and his majestic home, Casa do Passal, is falling to pieces.

aristideAristides de Sousa Mendes Photograph: Public domain

Further along the parade route, I meet Agostinho Nascimento, mayor of Beijoz – the town next door. He too has been enjoying the children's parade, a carnival tradition that marches right past the rusting gate and windowless facade of the Sousa Mendes house. He says: "This is not just a reflection of how we in Portugal don't value bravery and sacrifice in the face of great risk, this says something about how people in Europe and all over the world honour one of the most selfless acts one can commit."

Sacrifice is what Sousa Mendes embodied: he provided an unbelievable amount of visas and physically ushered refugees across the French-Spanish border, assuring their safe passage to officially neutral Portugal, only to eventually return home to be condemned and disgraced by a fascist government sympathetic to Hitler. His family would be blacklisted, his title stripped and his assets, including the mansion, confiscated.

"My grandfather never thought he would be punished to the extent that he was," Sousa Mendes's grandson, Aristides Manuel, explains. "He knew there would be some retribution, but to lose everything and have the family disgraced, he never thought it would go that far." Even after having lost everything for knowingly defying orders to not issue visas to "foreigners of indefinite or contested nationality; the stateless; or Jews expelled from their countries of origin", Antonio Salazar, dictator of Portugal, ordered that no one in the country show him charity. Having no other choice, his children left Portugal one by one. After suffering a stroke that left him partially paralysed in 1945 and the death of his wife in 1948, Sousa Mendes only received food and shelter with the help of a local Jewish refugee organisation until his death in 1954. According to his children, his last request was that his name be restored.

More than 55 years since his final wish, governments around the world – including the US, Israel and Portugal – have recognised him as a hero. His title of ambassador was posthumously restored in 1988, all charges against him were officially dropped, and by 2001 the Sousa Mendes home was handed over to the newly founded Aristides de Sousa Mendes Foundation. Their mission was to restore the mansion, abandoned since the 1950s, where – upon their arrival in Portugal – many of Sousa Mendes's visa recipients once took shelter.

The Portuguese government declared the site a national monument in 2008, but just when it seemed as if the historic building would finally be restored along with the family name, more obstacles appeared. Competing plans and a lack of consensus about how to make use of the building resulted in a stalemate on the part of the foundation, which continues even now. With Portugal itself engulfed by an economic crisis and widespread financial uncertainty, the foundation is in a state of paralysis.

While millions of people in the Middle East and north Africa march in the streets demanding human rights and democracy, the story of Sousa Mendes is more relevant than ever. It was not just in the 1940s that the world needed brave and defiant people to save lives, at this very moment in places such as Syria, Jordan, Yemen, Bahrain and Libya, there are once again people of authority who have the power to choose, even at great risk to their own careers or lives, not to open fire into that crowd, not to beat a teenager to submission, and not to follow the orders of a morally bankrupt leader.

It is up to all of us, as witnesses and human beings, to make sure Aristides de Sousa Mendes's past and present are not abandoned and neglected. Now more than ever, those who question orders and break the rules when the rules no longer value human life must be valued and celebrated.

2011/01/05

ARISTIDES DE SOUSA MENDES

Vancouver Holocaust Education centre (http://vhec.org/

image


VANCOUVER RAOUL WALLENBERG DAY

Sunday, January 16, 2011 | 1:30 PM
Vancity Theatre | 1181 Seymour Street, Vancouver


Désobéir
French with English subtitles

Aristides de Sousa Mendes was the Portuguese Consul who at great risk to himself saved the lives of 38,000 refugees, including 10,000 Jews fleeing Nazi persecution. He did so in defiance of his government and contravening the orders of the Salazar dictatorship. As a consequence, Sousa Mendes suffered severe reprisals from the Fascist Portuguese regime until the end off his life, when he died in poverty.

After the Second World War, the Portuguese dictator tried to claim credit for saving Jewish lives. Fortunately, the noble actions of Sousa Mendes were rightfully recognized after the Fascists were overthrown by the Carnation Revolution in 1974. The film Désobéir was instrumental in disclosing this history and in shedding light on the heroic life of Sousa Mendes.

ADMISSION BY DONATION | Reception to follow

Presented by Consulate of Sweden, Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre & Second Generation Group of Vancouver