From the BBC:
"Wallenberg family mark centenary with plea for truth"
The family of Raoul Wallenberg have
made one more appeal for the truth about what happened to the Swedish diplomat
on the eve of the centenary of his birth. Wallenberg saved tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis by
issuing them with Swedish papers during 1944-45, only to then disappear in
Soviet custody after the war. After years of official denial, a joint Russo-Swedish
working group was set up in 1991 to establish the facts. But it failed to draw
any definite conclusion.
"The family wants now to get the truth," says Cecilia Ahlberg, Wallenberg's
great-niece. "We want all the facts about his whereabouts in the Soviet Union,
what happened and when it happened."
Cecilia is sitting in the living room of her grandmother, Wallenberg's
half-sister Nina Lagergren, aged 91. Mrs Lagergren is equally adamant. "The Russians must know. There's no question of them not knowing what
happened, and we have not had a truthful answer." As the summer shadows lengthen on the lawn outside, Mrs Lagergren flicks
through a family album and recalls her last Christmas with Raoul Wallenberg. He was doing imitations: a Frenchman, an Englishman, a German… and we
laughed so much. That was the Christmas of '43, and one couldn't imagine that it
would be the last time we all saw him together." She speaks in the elegant, pre-war tones of the English upper classes - a
cut-glass accent and vocabulary honed at a London college in the 1930s.
And it was a British wartime propaganda film, Pimpernel Smith, which gave Mrs
Lagergren her first inkling that Raoul would do something special. The film takes the action of the Scarlet Pimpernel into pre-war Nazi Germany,
telling the story of Horatio Smith, a British archaeologist trying to save
inmates of concentration camps. "They couldn't show it openly in Stockholm, because it was anti-German. So
they had a special cinema where we could see it, specially invited, at the
British embassy. This was in 1942. And afterwards Raoul said: that is something
I would like to do."
On Mrs Lagergren's bedroom wall hangs an example of what he actually did: a
fading yellow Schutzpass (protective pass), an emergency document that he issued
to make Hungarian Jews citizens under Swedish protection. He would then move them from the ghetto to buildings which he rented and flew
the Swedish flag from. Tens of thousands were saved from deportation to
Auschwitz.
But as the Red Army approached, he grew increasingly concerned about the dire
humanitarian situation in the city - and resolved to make contact with them. On 17 January 1945 he drove off to meet the Soviet forces, but was arrested
two days later and taken to the Lubyanka prison in Moscow.
The document of Wallenberg's arrest was released recently by the Russian
authorities to Swedish author Ingrid Carlberg. Intriguingly, Column 13, for the
type of crime committed, is left blank.
At the time the Soviets said they had no knowledge of
Wallenberg's fate, although they released other Swedish diplomats separately
taken captive. "My mother went to meet them. She wanted to see with her own eyes that Raoul
wasn't there. That began her martyrdom, one can say, which went on until her
death." Wallenberg's mother committed suicide in 1979, refusing to believe Soviet
claims - made later - that Wallenberg had died in captivity in 1947. As late as the 1970s and 80s witnesses emerged saying they had met Wallenberg
in the Soviet gulag. Recent months have seen a new burst of activity. In January, the Swedish
foreign ministry began making new inquiries with the Russian authorities. That followed claims by researchers of new archival evidence, hinging on the
existence of a mysterious Prisoner Number 7 interrogated in Lubyanka a week
after Wallenberg's supposed death.
But researchers say the Russians are not giving them full access to the
archive - merely to redacted photocopies of some documents. Last month, the
family wrote to the Russians demanding they finally provide full and unfettered
access. "They promise researchers access, but when they come to the archive they're
given a photocopy or told a family member needs to be with them. Researchers are
not getting the full picture," says Cecilia. "A long time has passed and it's time to get the truth, for the family to
finally get peace."
^ It is clear to everyone around the world that the Russians know exactly what happened to Raoul Wallenberg and they do not want it known to the West what they did to him. You would expect the Soviet Union to cover it up as they did all the millions upon millions of deaths and arrests they did, but in the 21 years since the USSR collapse it is odd that Russia continues that practice - especially regarding Wallenberg. He would have been 100 this year. Wallenberg was a great man who risked his life and went to German-occupied Hungary to save Jews. He could have stayed home in neutral Sweden and did nothing, but the fact that he went and protected thousands of innocent people (even taking many off the deportation trains heading to Auschwitz) shows his true, unselfish character. The fact that he survived the Nazis, but was captured and killed by the Soviets is extremely sad. Hopefully, the Russian Government will one-day give a completely honest accounting of what happened to him. ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-19101339
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