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Home Front: Culture Wars
Another WWII hero honored
2006-05-29
Hat tip Meryl Yourish.
Sixty-six years ago, Hiram Bingham IV, a blue-blood American diplomat in France, defied U.S. policy by helping Jews escape the Nazis in the early years of World War II.

Bingham's actions cost him his Foreign Service career but won him the undying gratitude of the more than 2,000 refugees he helped save by issuing them travel visas and false passports, and even at times sheltering them in his home. Only in recent years has his heroism been officially recognized by his own country.

Bingham, the Yale-educated son of a former U.S. senator, died in 1988 at age 84. His own children did not learn the extent of his wartime deeds until 1996, when a son found a cache of old journals and correspondence stashed in a hidden closet in the family's Connecticut home. Soon Bingham's face -- and, supporters hope, his story -- will be well known across the United States, as the U.S. Postal Service issues a stamp next Wednesday in his honor.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  Bureaucracy doesn't tolerate dissent from their hive-mind. Today, any guess on how an ambassador spiriting domestic dissenters from say.. Egypt or Saudi would be seen in State Dept halls?

"what are you doing? Trying to kill our supplemental pensions?"
Posted by: Frank G   2006-05-29 22:11  

#2  Truly an honorable man. There was a similar Japanese consul in the Baltics and a Swiss border official. All were punished by their govenments for being honorable and their careers never recovered. It's amazing that it took so long for the heroism to be recognized, though in Bingham's case that is partly due to the modesty of the man.
Posted by: Odysseus   2006-05-29 19:55  

#1  "To be depicted on an American stamp is not something that is easily achieved," Day said.

Certainly not. Now did you vote for the young Elvis or the one in the white suit?
Posted by: Elmineger Shineck4988   2006-05-29 08:38  

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