The Jewish Chronicle

MI6 honour for the spy who saved Jews

- BY BEN WEICH

A BRITISH spy who saved the lives of thousands of Jews from Nazi Germany has been honoured by the head of MI6.

The heroics of Frank Foley, born in 1884, were celebrated at a reception at the agency’s headquarte­rs on Tuesday, attended by his family members and representa­tives of the Holocaust Education Trust.

Officially a passport control officer attached to the British embassy in Berlin in the 1920s and ‘30s, Mr Foley used his position as an undercover British intelligen­ce operative to issue false papers for Jews, securing their release from internment camps. He also hid fugitives in his flat in the city.

A letter written by Mr Foley in March 1933 reported that his office was “overwhelme­d” with applicatio­ns from Jews to proceed to then-Mandate Palestine, or elsewhere in the British Empire. Alex Younger, head of MI6, yesterday described Mr Foley as a man of “dignity, compassion and bravery”. He added: “As a consummate­ly effective intelligen­ce officer he witnessed at first hand the Nazi seizure of power, and the horrors and depravity of the regime.

“While many condemned and criticised the Nazis’ discrimina­tive laws, Frank took action. With little regard for his personal safety he took a stance against evil.”

Mr Foley is estimated to have helped to save the lives of about 10,000 Jews, almost all from Germany. Later, during the Second World War, Mr Foley was given the task of questionin­g Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess, after his flight to Scotland.

In 1949 Mr Foley retired to Stourbridg­e, in the West Midlands, where he died in 1958, aged 73.

 ??  ?? Frank Foley
Frank Foley

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