Forward
- 10.02.2003
Forward
Russia Must Open Its Archives On Shoah Hero Raoul
Wallenberg
By TOM LANTOS
Twenty-two years ago this Sunday, Raoul Wallenberg became an honorary
citizen of the United States. The honor, though, was truly ours: This
extraordinary man helped save tens of thousands of lives, including my
wife's and mine, while working under the direction of the American
government.
Yet, the full truth about Wallenberg's own fate remains unknown.
The international community, and most especially the American
government, must redouble their efforts to establish the facts of what
happened to him. Additional pressure must be brought to bear against
Russia to open all archives related to his case, even if it means
unleashing embarrassing secrets of the Soviet era — or more recent
secrets, and not just Russian ones.
Anyone who knows Wallenberg's story is aware that humanity owes him a
huge debt; when so many others were less courageous or even complicit in
the evil of their time, he chose to risk his privileged life in order to
help friends and strangers alike.
The scion of a prominent Swedish family, Wallenberg was sought out by
the U.S. War Refugee Board in Stockholm for a dangerous task: to rescue
thousands of Hungarian Jews. At age 32 he was appointed secretary of the
Swedish legation in Hungary, which received financial help from the
United States and guidance from the War Refugee Board under the
supervision of the American secretary of state.
The Nazis had already deported more than 400,000 Hungarian Jewish
men, women and children to the camps. Only about 230,000 Jews were left
in Budapest. Wallenberg set out at once to save them through courage,
ingenuity, diligence and bluff. He devised creative and effective
solutions, such as protective Swedish passes bearing official signatures
and safe houses flying the Swedish flag, and he employed traditional
techniques in use at the time, including threats and bribes. Wallenberg
spared tens of thousands of people from deportation and death marches
while Nazi power was at its peak, and many more from an all-out massacre
as the desperate Germans withdrew toward the war's end.
But Soviet military authorities arrested Wallenberg in January 1945,
in violation of international law. Three months later, American
Secretary of State Edward Stettinus instructed the American ambassador
in Moscow, Averell Harriman, to offer help on Wallenberg's behalf to
Sweden's ambassador, who reportedly rebuffed the offer. This response
was enough to signal to the United States that little could be done to
help Wallenberg, even though it was known at the highest level of the
State Department that his life could be in danger.
However, members of Congress continued to press Wallenberg's case. In
1947, the prominent chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Arthur Vandenberg, appealed directly to Acting Secretary of State Dean
Acheson to intervene, but Acheson refused.
The State Department's official position appears to have remained
unchanged for decades. In 1973, 28 years after Wallenberg was taken into
Russian custody, his ailing mother wrote to Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger pleading with him to seek information about her son from the
Kremlin. The State Department's European Bureau strongly supported her
request, but for reasons that have never been adequately explained,
Kissinger did not.
Meanwhile, congressional efforts to shine a spotlight on Wallenberg's
situation continued sporadically. As a new member of the House of
Representatives in 1981, the first bill I introduced was to grant
Wallenberg honorary American citizenship. At the time, only one other
person had been made an honorary American citizen, Sir Winston
Churchill. The legislation sped through Congress, and President Reagan
signed it into law in the Rose Garden that fall.
Some of us in Congress continued to press the Russians through the
years, using the vehicle of Wallenberg's honorary citizenship.
Unfortunately, our progress in solving this mystery has been minimal.
Today we know next to nothing about the ultimate fate of perhaps the
greatest hero of the Holocaust era. Only two years ago, Sweden's prime
minister announced that "it cannot be said" that Wallenberg
"is dead."
Indeed, with the release of a detailed Swedish Foreign Office study,
Prime Minister Goran Persson concluded "there is no evidence of
what happened" to Wallenberg. The report noted that the Swedish
government had failed to take opportunities, particularly in the latter
half of the 1940s, to obtain Wallenberg's release.
And in March of this year, a top-level Swedish investigatory body,
the Eliasson Commission, added little to the prime minister's remarks
but was even sharper in chastising the Swedish Foreign Ministry for its
initial "palpable lack of interest" in the Wallenberg case.
Also criticized was the American failure at the beginning to assure
"a high degree of responsibility" in providing for
Wallenberg's security.
The Kremlin may insist today that Wallenberg was executed in the
Lubyanka prison in July 1947, but it has offered no real proof, no
documentation and no evidence to validate that claim. As early as the
fall of 1991, Russia's top archivist bitterly and publicly complained
that the KGB had deliberately classified various documents of the
Wallenberg case as "operational intelligence" and, therewith,
closed them to public scrutiny.
The Eliasson Commission called upon the Kremlin to release "all
the relevant material" about the Wallenberg case. In the final
analysis, it said, responsibility for ascertaining "the entire
truth" about Wallenberg rests "with the leadership of
Russia." Geopolitics would suggest that only the United States can
offer the leverage to move that leadership.
October 5 not only marks the anniversary of the law making Wallenberg
an honorary American citizen; it also happens to be the date that the
cornerstone of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was laid at 100
Wallenberg Place in Washington.
Many honors have been given, and will continue to be given, to
preserve the memory of Wallenberg's achievements. Next month, he will be
made an honorary citizen of Budapest. Such honors are helpful in
educating the world about Wallenberg's selfless and courageous work.
But that is not enough. The United States must pressure Russia to
open all of its Wallenberg archives so the fate of this remarkable
honorary citizen, who worked closely with this country in a time of
international crisis but was evidently left stranded when he needed help
most, can finally be learned.
California Rep. Tom Lantos is the senior Democrat on the House
International Relations Committee.