From the BBC:
“Austrian
man leaves 'large amount' to village that saved family from Nazis”
An Austrian man
has left a bequest to a French village as a gesture of gratitude decades after
residents took in his family during World War Two. Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, in
south-east France, protected thousands of Jews and has a long-standing
reputation for shielding people from persecution. Eric Schwam, who died last
month at 90, arrived there with his family in 1943. The town's mayor says he
left the village a "large amount" in his will, without confirming a
figure. But his mayoral predecessor told local media Mr Schwam had enquired
with officials years ago and the total is thought to be about €2m (£1.7m;
$2.4m). Denise Vallat, culture and communication assistant at Le
Chambon-sur-Lignon, said the town was contacted by a notary about three weeks
ago to discuss the donation. "He was a very discreet gentleman and he
didn't want a lot of publicity about his gesture," she was quoted by
France 3 as saying. "Little is known about the donor but we did some
research." According to that research, Mr Schwam's family were originally
from Vienna, where his father was a doctor. He arrived in the town in 1943 with
his parents and a grandmother. It is not known how the refugee family got
there, but they had previously been held at Rivesaltes camp, a military
facility in southern France used to intern civilians, before its closure in
1942. Records suggest Mr Schwam's parents returned to Austria after the war but
he moved to Lyon in 1950 to study pharmacy. It was there he met, married and
lived with his future wife. According to local reports, the couple did not have
children and he was a widower before his death on 25 December. Mayor
Jean-Michel Eyraud told AFP that Mr Schwam's fortune would be used to fund
education and youth initiatives.
Le
Chambon-sur-Lignon has a population of only about 2,500 people but has a
reputation as a place of refuge dating back to the French Protestant Huguenots
who fled religious persecution during the 17th Century. During WW2, a local
pastor and his wife led calls to protect Jewish refugees from the occupying
Nazis and Vichy French collaborators. Word spread through human rights groups
and word of mouth and the village became a hub of the resistance movement, with
ordinary residents taking in and hiding those who fled. Le Chambon-sur-Lignon
was later recognised by Israel for its extraordinary effort.
^ The world
needs to remember both the people and the communities that worked hard to help
the men, women and children that needed the help to survive - even at the risk of their own lives. France
openly and officially collaborated with the Germans during World War 2 and so
it’s nice to see that not all Frenchmen/women believed in what horrible crimes
the Nazis and their helpers were committing. ^
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