Essential History for Americans
The fascinating, and terrifying true story of Varian Fry packs power today. It still remains relevant in U.S. and world politics. Yet Fry and his race against time got buried for years due to American leaders' embarrassment. None wanted it to be known they turned a blind eye to a wholesale massacre of intellectuals and anti-nazi activists and writers.
Not only is this nonfiction book a biography of an unsung hero, but it fills in the gaps of what happened after the Nazis slaughtered Frances army in three days, the dividing of the nation into two parts, and what happened to the geniuses after Hitler deprived them of their German citizenship.
Only a handful of Americans understood the leading novelists, poets, journalists, painters, performers, and scientists went into hiding after Hitler grabbed power. Most of these brilliant and talented Europeans fled the onslaught of the Gestapo. Most of them changed countries faster than they changed shoes. Varian Fry and others became aware that if a rescue project were not undertaken, Hilter would hunt all of them down in Marseille, France, and "could easily blow Europe's brains out" in one mass murder. Thankfully, Eleanor Roosevelt became a strong supporter of this citizen's effort.
This story reveals a secret small American group effort that raised funds to provide rescue visas to the U.S.A. or any neutral government. But Fry took the job without training. He learned that Spain and Portugal remained open and began to transfer or illegally send improvised refugees over the Pyrenees with a young couple who would later write a book.
Ultimately, this account of Varian Fry's tenacious efforts, legal and illegal work, to save endangered individuals in Europe. He hired employees to work in his tiny hotel room. Eventually, when the Vichy pro-German government began harassing Fry, he created a legal agency to vet and aid refugees in obtaining visas. Easier said than done. The American Embassy in France obstructed Fry at every turn. Fry visited Marseille's Department of Aliens, which could give residence permits, but as Fry depicted, the French representative seemed a mix of greed, opportunism, and half-buried decency.
Overall, I found this book wholly worthwhile and an astoundingly hopeful story.
Despite multiple enemies and criminal scams, Fry and his team succeeded beyond his original mission to stay for two months and save two hundred listed exceptional persons. Instead, in thirteen months, they rescued four thousand people, some young and promising in their expertise.