Luxury properties Cannes

Luxury properties Cannes France
 

One Good Man
In the early 1940S, in spite of open visa quotas, the US Department of State with its prejudiced, bury-its-head-in-the-sand bureaucracy maintained a policy of turning back ships of refugees from Hitler. Consulates in Europe were advised, as one memo put it/to resort to various administrative devices which would postpone and postpone and postpone the granting of the visas'. In one particularly shameful episode, the US Vice Consul in Lyon denied visas to Jewish children because their parents might be arrested, leaving their children to become public charges in the USA.<br />
The one hero in the story was Varian Fry. Two months after the Nazis occupied Marseille, 32-year-old Fry, editor of a New York foreign policy review, arrived in the city as the representative of a privately funded group called the Emergency Rescue Committee. Although he had no previous experience in the f ield, and in spite of the considerable risks from the Cesta and Vichy and the opposition of his own government, Fry quickly made himself an expert in obtaining false papers, forging documents and organizing safe transport out of Marseille: among the 1,500 people he saved were Marcel Duchamp, Marc Chagall, Hannah Arendt, Andre Breton and Max Ernst. Fry worked for 13 months before he was expelled from Marseille. On his return to the United States, he published an article on the systematic persecution of the Jews and the concentration camps, which made later pleas of officiai ignorance ring less than true. Just before Varian Fry died in 1967, the French government awarded him the Legion of Honour. And in October 2000 a square next to the American consulate (on Boulevard Paul Peytral) was named in his honour, Place Varian Fry. Presiding over the dedication ceremony was the US ambassador to France, Felix Rohatyn, who as a child was spirited out of occupied Marseille, in ali likelihood by the good offices of Fry.<br />
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