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A Hero of Our Own: The Story of Varian Fry by Sheila Isenberg

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In 1940, a young Harvard-educated American named Varian Fry, inexperienced and not at all certain that he possessed any courage, went on a secret mission to Marseille. There, with only three thousand dollars and a list of names, he was to help those who had fled Nazi Germany and were now trapped in southern France.The list he took with him had been prepared by, among others, the Museum of Modern Art and Eleanor Roosevelt. It included most of the premier writers, painters, and scientists of Europe, many of them Jews—people like Marc Chagall and Max Ernst, Jacques Lipchitz, Marcel Duchamp, Hannah Arendt, Franz Werfel, André Breton, André Masson, and other sur- realists, and hundreds more. When Fry witnessed their plight, he became determined not just to give them immediate aid but to find ways for them to escape. Slowly he built up a group of people who could help, forging passports and finding secret paths across the Pyrenees into Spain and then to Lisbon. Fry himself was constantly in great danger, but he seemed to experience a divine inspiration, achieving greatness and glimpsing immortality by acting as the hero he never thought he could be. His own government tried again and again to stop him and send him home, but he managed to continue his rescue operations for more than a year.Only in the past decade has the world begun to honor Fry, who died in 1967. He is, for instance, the only American honored at Israel’s Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem, as one of the “Righteous Among the Nations.”Using letters and records unavailable to anyone else, as well as interviews with numerous survivors, Sheila Isenberg hasgiven us an inspiring story of how the brave and determined actions of one individual can help change the world.

Paperback Bunko

First published October 30, 2001

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Sheila Isenberg

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Maura.
816 reviews
May 22, 2019
Interesting and informative. Also a bit depressing in light of current events - seeing some history repeat itself and not in a good way. Varian Fry was a good person but complicated. Probably bipolar, and possibly (definitely, according to his son in a recent letter to the NY Times Book Review) a closeted homosexual. Highly intelligent, arrogant, intolerant of those he saw as less gifted, plagued with fits of anger, he had a mostly friendless youth. His mother suffered from some sort of mental illness and was often absent from his life as she was hospitalized for treatment. Despite these burdens, his life stabilized somewhat in early adulthood perhaps due to his marriage to an older woman he met while in college. He volunteered to be the International Rescue Committee's point person in Marseilles when no one else wanted to go, arriving in Europe with a list of names - people to be saved from the coming Holocaust. These were artists, authors, and prominent political people who were Jewish and / or anti-Nazi. Once he arrived in France, Fry found he had to expand the list greatly as he was swamped with refugees clamoring for visas to leave France. There were no rulebooks or procedures in place for this work, so Fry had to develop his own system. As if this weren't enough challenge, he found an uncooperative State Dept and consulate (which he later blamed himself for, thinking he hadn't done enough to introduce himself there first). Hiram Bingham was one person at State who understood what was happening and was a huge help in getting people out, and for his trouble was recalled by the US and dumped into crap jobs for the rest of his career....Fry found he had to resort to illegal means to get refugees out of France, hiring a forger to make the necessary paperwork at times.

Reading this made me understand more of the background of the movie "Casablanca". Refugees needed passports, exit visas, transit letters, entry visas, and often proof of ship passage in order to successfully emigrate - a major challenge of timing since documents often expired after six months, ship schedules were erratic, and bureaucratic offices were slow-moving and stingy with paperwork. It's a wonder anyone got away. What is truly sad and shameful is how anti-Semitic and isolationist our own government was, how afraid that these refugees were spies and criminals (sound familiar?), and how many more visas could have been issued to save people from the Holocaust.

Fry continued his work even thought the IRC tried to recall him several times. Finally he was forced to leave France, partly because his own life was beginning to be in danger and partly by the US which refused to issue him a new passport until he left France. He returned to New York where his life pattern of ups and downs returned - very little in his life after France ever meant as much to him as those months there. He felt his mission was not a success because of the many people on his list he hadn't saved. Yet he is the only American honored by Israel as "Righteous Among the Nations" for his work in saving European Jewry from the Holocaust.
Profile Image for Dvora Treisman.
Author 3 books31 followers
September 8, 2021
This is a poorly written book about an extraordinary person. I'm very sorry to say this, because Varian Fry, for all his struggles with the leadership of his organization, Vichy authorities and police, and the U.S. State Department, still managed to save almost 2,000 civilian lives during WWII. These were people who would have been shot or sent up in smoke by the Nazis for being degenerate artists (such as Chagall and Miro), anti-fascists, or Jews.

His story is told here but it is told in such a tedious manner that if you aren't committed to the subject, you probably wouldn't make it to the end. A very sad end, as it turned out.

Fry captured my interest for the brave and effective work he did despite all odds and obstacles. Shame on the American government for getting in his way while he tried to save the lives of hundreds of scientists, writers, artists, Nobel prize winners, Jews and then blocking him from making a living when he was called back to the United States. There is another book out about him and I'm waiting for it to arrive so I can read it and see if someone did him a greater service by writing a readable account of his life. Varian Fry deserves five stars plus, but I can't go higher than three for this book.
1,915 reviews8 followers
July 2, 2023
Published in 2001.
Another in the chronicle of Varian Fry.
In 1963, Fry was charged to get drawings for the International Rescue Committee, (The Portfolio Project) from a dozen or so great artists, many of whom Fry helped to save from the Nazis. You think it would have been easy, but even so, he had a difficult time getting the art. Chagall finally gave a drawing but wouldn't sign it since he wasn't being paid.
IN 1996, U.S. Sec of State Warren Christopher apologized for State Dept treatment of Fry.
"We come to pay tribute to ... Varian Fry, a remarkable man and a remarkable American."
Possibly manic depressive.
7 reviews
September 30, 2019
I opted to find out the true story of Varian Fry - after not being able to finish the Flight Portfolio. I was not wrong. His true story is so compelling - fiction cannot do his story justice. For the bulk of Fry's life he was a passenger and it seemed that he was put on this earth to do one great thing - and he did it. I was impressed with him and the way Ms. Isenberg told his story.
89 reviews
November 25, 2021
This story is very interesting but the book needs MAJOR editing! It’s ridiculously repetitive. Goes into way too much detail.
Google Varian Fry and find out who he was and what he accomplished. Done.
203 reviews
September 20, 2025
It started out very interesting, then it was a bit difficult to continue reading in the middle. This man tried so hard to save people. It a very sad account of how the Americans refused the help the refugees in the Holocaust.
10 reviews3 followers
March 26, 2008
This book was very informative and inspiring. It is refeshing to know that there were Americans who did care about what was going on in France during the Nazi occupation, and that they reflected the disgust that most Americans held for Nazi ideology. I didn't know that Varian helped people like Marc Chagall and the author of The Song of Bernadette escape. I love all of the stories of the French Resistance, and their involvement with Fry's Rescue Aid Society makes his story even more compelling.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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