"IT CAN BE DONE":
70 YEARS SINCE THE ESCAPE OF DENMARK'S
JEWS
by Rafael Medoff
(Dr. Rafael Medoff is director of The David
S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, in Washington, D.C. His latest book
is FDR and the Holocaust: A Breach of Faith.)
As the
final minutes of Rosh Hashana ticked away, thirteen year-old Leo Goldberger was
hiding, along with his parents and three brothers, in the thick brush along the
shore of Dragor, a small fishing village south of Copenhagen. The year was 1943,
and the Goldbergers, like thousands of other Danish Jews, were desperately
trying to escape an imminent Nazi round-up.
"Finally,
after what seemed like an excruciatingly long wait, we saw our signal offshore,"
Goldberger later recalled. "We strode straight into the ocean and waded through
three or four feet of icy water until we were hauled aboard a fishing boat" and
"covered with smelly canvases." Shivering, frightened, but grateful, the
Goldberger family soon found themselves in the safety and freedom of neighboring
Sweden.
For years,
the Allied leaders had insisted that nothing could be done to rescue Jews from
the Nazis except to win the war. But in one extraordinary night, seventy years
ago this week, the Danish people exploded that myth and changed
history.
* * *
When the
Nazis occupied Denmark in 1940, the Danes put up little resistance. As a result,
the German authorities agreed to let the Danish government continue functioning
with greater autonomy than other occupied countries. They also postponed taking
steps against Denmark’s 8,000 Jewish citizens.
In the
late summer of 1943, amid rising tensions between the occupation regime and the
Danish government, the Nazis declared martial law and decided the time had come
to deport Danish Jews to the death camps. But Georg Duckwitz, a German diplomat
in Denmark, leaked the information to Danish friends. (Duckwitz was later
honored by Yad Vashem as one of the Righteous Among the Nations.) As word of the
Germans' plans spread, the Danish public responded with a spontaneous nationwide
grassroots effort to help the Jews.
The Danes'
remarkable response gave rise to the legend that King Christian X himself rode
through the streets of Copenhagen on horseback, wearing a yellow Star of David,
and that the citizens of the city likewise donned the star in solidarity with
the Jews.
The story
may have had its origins in a political cartoon that appeared in a Swedish
newspaper in 1942. It showed King Christian pointing to a Star of David and
declaring that if the Nazis imposed it upon the Jews of Demark, "then we must
all wear the star." Leon Uris's novel Exodus, and the movie based on that book,
helped spread the legend. But subsequent investigations by historians have
concluded that the story is a myth.
A MIDNIGHT ESCAPE
On Rosh
Hashana and the days that follow, numerous Danish Christian families hid Jews in
their homes or farms and then smuggled them to the seashore late at night. From
there, fishermen took them across the Kattegat Straits to neighboring Sweden.
This three-week rescue operation had the strong support of Danish church
leaders, who used their pulpits to urge aid to the Jews, as well as Danish
universities, which shut down so that students could assist the smugglers. More
than 7,000 Danish Jews reached Sweden and were sheltered there until the end of
the war.
Esther
Finkler, a young newlywed, was hidden, together with her husband and
their mothers, in a greenhouse. “At night, we saw the [German] searchlights
sweeping back and forth throughout the neighborhood,” as the Nazis hunted for
Jews. One evening, a member of the Danish Underground arrived and drove the
four, “through streets saturated with Nazi stormtroopers,” to a point near the
shore.
There they hid
in an underground shelter, then in the attic of a bakery, until finally they
were brought to a beach, where they boarded a small fishing vessel together with
other Jewish refugees. “There were nine of us, lying down on the deck or the
floor,” Esther later recalled. “The captain covered us with fishing nets. When
everyone had been properly concealed, the fishermen started the boat, and as the
motor started to run, so did my pent up tears.”
Then, suddenly,
trouble: “The captain began to sing and whistle nonchalantly, which puzzled us.
Soon we heard him shouting in German toward a passing Nazi patrol boat: ‘Wollen
sie einen beer haben?’ (Would you like a beer?) —a clever gimmick designed
to avoid the Germans’ suspicions. After three tense hours at sea, we heard
shouting: ‘Get up! Get up! And welcome to Sweden!’ It was hard to believe, but
we were now safe. We cried and the Swedes cried with us as they escorted as
ashore. The nightmare was over.”
IT CAN BE
DONE
The
implications of the Danish rescue operation resonated strongly in the
United States. The Roosevelt administration had long insisted that rescue of
Jews from the Nazis was not possible. The refugee advocates known as the Bergson
Group began citing the escape of Denmark’s Jews as evidence that if the Allies
were sufficiently interested, ways could be found to save many European
Jews.
The
Bergsonites sponsored a series of full-page newspaper advertisements about the
Danish-Swedish effort, headlined “It Can Be Done!” On October 31, thousands of
New Yorkers jammed Carnegie Hall for the Bergson Group’s “Salute to Sweden and
Denmark” rally.
Keynote
speakers included members of Congress, Danish and Swedish diplomats, and one of
the biggest names in Hollywood--Orson Welles, director of Citizen Kane and The
War of the Worlds. In another coup for the Bergson Group, one of the speakers
was Leon Henderson, one of President Roosevelt's own former economic advisers
(Henderson had headed the White House's Office of Price
Administration).
In blunt
language that summed up the tragedy--and the hope--Henderson declared: "The
Allied Governments have been guilty of moral cowardice. The issue of saving the
Jewish people of Europe has been avoided, submerged, played down, hushed up,
resisted with all the forms of political force that are available…Sweden and
Denmark have proved the tragedy of Allied indecision…The Danes and Swedes have
shown us the way..If this be a war for civilization, then most surely this is
the time to be civilized!"
(Distributed by JNS.org)
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