From Yahoo:
“Poland Holocaust Heroes”
A U.S.-based Jewish foundation
honored Polish gentiles who rescued Jews during the Holocaust, a number that
grows smaller each year, with U.S. and Israeli diplomats also paying their
respects at the event Sunday in Warsaw to the elderly Poles who put their lives
in danger to save others. Those still living today, 80 years after the start of
World War II, were children or young adults during the war, and in most cases
helped their parents in the dangerous job of hiding and feeding Jews. During
the German occupation, those caught aiding Jews were punished with the
execution of entire families. Today, the rescuers are in their 80s and 90s, and
they arrived at the event in Warsaw helped by their children, with some in
wheelchairs. "On behalf of the Jewish people, I thank you for your noble
deeds so many years ago, for when most turned their backs on their Jewish
neighbors, you did not," Stanlee Stahl, the foundation's executive vice
president, told those gathered. "You will always be remembered in our
prayers, for you didn't just save the Jewish person 75 years ago, you made it
possible for generations to be born." Giving one example, she singled out
two brothers in attendance, Andrzej and Leszek Mikolajkow, who with their
parents saved a Jewish mother, father and two sons. One of those sons ended up
moving to Israel and having 12 sons of his own, and the family today numbers
300. "You made it possible for hundreds if not thousands of people to be
alive today," Stahl said. "You have helped repair the world." All
of the rescuers have been recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad
Vashem, Israel's Holocaust museum and memorial. According to Yad Vashem's
website, 27,362 people have been recognized to date as "Righteous Among
the Nations," even though there are certainly many more who helped Jews
who haven't been recognized because they were killed or there were no survivors
to alert Yad Vashem to their actions. The country with the largest number of
acknowledged rescuers, with far over 6,000, is Poland, which was home to
Europe's largest Jewish community before World War II. The Jewish Foundation
for the Righteous pays monthly stipends to elderly rescuers in Eastern Europe,
many of whom live on pensions of only a few hundred dollars a month in Poland
and far less in Ukraine and elsewhere. Last Christmas each rescuer got an
additional $1,500, a gesture that goes far beyond just symbolic help, and the
group has also helped them with medicines and hearing aids.
^ It’s important to remember the
men, women and children that risked everything to save people (whether they
were Jews or not.) It doesn’t matter how many years (70, 80, 200, etc.) have
passed since the events took place. These men and women put their own lives in
danger to do what was right at a time when the majority of other people did
little to nothing. While it is good to recognize their actions it is even
better to help those that are still alive to live however long they have left
in comfort. ^
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