Varian Fry
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Varian Mackey Fry (October 15 1907–September 13, 1967) was a Hotchkiss School and Harvard University educated, American journalist who ran a rescue network in Vichy France that helped approximately 2,000 to 4,000 anti-Nazi and Jewish refugees to escape Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.
Biography
Born in New York City in 1907, Fry founded Hound & Horn, an influential literary quarterly, in 1927 with Lincoln Kirstein while an undergraduate at Harvard. He married Kirstein's sister, Eileen.While working as a foreign correspondent for the American journal The Living Age, Varian Fry visited Berlin in 1935 and personally witnessed Nazi savagery against Jews on more than one occasion. Greatly disturbed by what he saw, he helped raise money to support European anti-Nazi movements. Following the occupation of France, he went to Marseille in an effort to help persons wishing to flee the Nazis. Beginning in 1940, in Marseille, despite the watchful eye of the collaborationist Vichy regime, he and a small group of volunteers hid people at the Villa Air-Bel until they could be smuggled out. More than 2,200 people were taken across the border to the safety of neutral Portugal from which they made their way to the United States.
Others he helped escape on ships leaving Marseille for the French colony of Martinique, from which they too could go to the United States. Among Fry's closest associates were Americans Miriam Davenport, a former art student at the Sorbonne, and the beautiful heiress Mary Jayne Gold, a lover of the arts and the "good life" who had come to Paris in the early 1930s. When the Nazis seized France in 1940, Gold went to Marseille, where she worked with Fry and helped finance his operation. Also working with Fry was a young academic named Albert O. Hirschman, who eventually went on to a distinguished career in America. Especially instrumental in getting Fry the visas he needed for the artists, intellectuals and political dissidents on his list was Hiram Bingham IV, an American Vice Consul in Marseille, who fought against State Department anti-Semitism, and was personally responsible for issuing thousands of visas, both legal and illegal.
Among those Fry aided were the following:
- Hannah Arendt
- André Breton
- Marc Chagall
- Max Ernst
- Lion Feuchtwanger
- Heinz Jolles
- Wilfredo Lam
- Wanda Landowska
- Jacques Lipchitz
- Alma Mahler Gropius Werfel.
- Andre Masson
- Otto Meyerhoff
- Marcel Duchamp
- Franz Werfel
- Heinrich Mann
After death
In 1967, the government of France recognized his heroic contribution to freedom with the Legion of Honor. Beyond that, he was basically forgotten in life and death until recent years. His deeds began to be recognized after Mary Jayne Gold's 1980 book titled Crossroads Marseilles 1940 sparked an interest in Fry and his heroic efforts. Now being called the "American Schindler," in 1995 Varian Fry became the first United States citizen to join to be listed in the Righteous Among the Nations at Israel's national Holocaust Memorial, Yad Vashem (in 2006, fellow Americans Waitstill Sharp and Martha Sharp were added to the list). He was awarded the additional honor of "Commemorative Citizenship of the State of Israel" on January 1, 1998.On the initiative of Samuel V. Brock, the U.S. Consul General in Marseille from 1999 to 2002, the square in front of the Consulate was renamed Place Varian Fry. A street in the newly reconstructed East/West Berlin Wall area in the Berlin borough of Mitte was named Varian-Fry-Straße in recognition of his work in the Nazi period.
In 1997 Irish film director David Kerr made a documentary entitled that was narrated by actor Sean Barrett. Varian Fry's story was also told in dramatic form on film in 2001 when American entertainer Barbra Streisand co-produced the made-for-television motion picture, Varian's War written and directed by Lionel Chetwynd and starring William Hurt and Julia Ormond.
Books about Varian Fry
- by Andy Marino (1999)
- by Sheila Isenberg (2001)
- The novel The Virgil Directive by Tad Richards (Fawcett, 1982) was based on the story of Varian Fry.
External links
- [Varian Fry Institute]
- [Varian Fry in Marseille]
- [Mary Jayne Gold]
- [Miriam Davenport Ebel]
- [An American Hero of Our Times: The Varian Fry Drive for a United States Centennial Commemorative Stamp] from Holocaust Survivors' Network --iSurvived.org
- [The forgotten hero who displayed extraordinary courage]
- [A Rescuer of Intellectuals From Vichy France]
- [Varian Fry Papers]
- [link] at Columbia University
- [Hero and Odball]
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