Miami Herald (Sunday)

Justus Rosenberg, Holocaust rescuer, dies at 100

- BY EMILY LANGER The Washington Post

“I think of my life,” Justus Rosenberg once told an interviewe­r, “as what the French call concours de circonstan­ces – a confluence of circumstan­ces.”

Those circumstan­ces took Rosenberg from his home in what is now the Polish city of Gdansk to Vichy France, where, at age 19, he became a courier in the storied rescue mission led by the U.S. journalist Varian Fry. Known as the American Schindler for his efforts to save European Jews during the Holocaust, Fry was credited with helping spirit 2,000 refugees out of Nazi Europe, among them prominent intellectu­als, artists and writers including Hannah Arendt, Marc Chagall, Max Ernst and André Breton.

Circumstan­ces later led Rosenberg into the French resistance and might have carried him off to a Nazi labor camp had he not pulled off a daring escape.

By the end of World War II, he was working for the U.S. Army as a translator – service that helped earn him the visa that allowed him to come to the United States, where for more than half a century he taught languages and literature at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y., and the New School in Manhattan.

“I didn’t consider it particular­ly heroic,” Rosenberg told New York Jewish Week in 2016, reflecting on his wartime past. “It was just part of my life . . . . There were so many people who did much more.”

Rosenberg died Oct. 30 at his home in Rhinebeck,

N.Y. The cause was complicati­ons from a broken hip, according to his wife, Karin Rosenberg, who noted that he also suffered from heart ailments. She said that for years her husband had spoken little if at all of his experience during the war, and that only relatively late in his life did the full extent of his actions emerge.

Justus Rosenberg was born on Jan. 23, 1921, to an affluent Jewish family in Danzig, an ethnically German “free city” then under the protection of the League of Nations. His father ran an import-export business, and his mother was a homemaker.

After Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany in 1933, the Nazi tide soon swept to Danzig, where Rosenberg was expelled from his high school because he was Jewish. In 1937, his parents sent him alone to Paris to continue his studies, never predicting that World War II would begin two years later and that their separation from their son would last 15 years.

Germany invaded Poland in 1939, and “suddenly I could no longer correspond with my parents,” Rosenberg told the Times of Israel in 2017. “I had no money. Like everybody else, I read about the war in the papers. I thought, ‘What can I do about it?’ ”

Shortly before the Nazis entered Paris in June 1940, Rosenberg fled south, to Toulouse, in the unoccupied territory that became Vichy France. He found shelter in a movie theater where straw bags served as beds. There he met Miriam Davenport, an American artist working with Fry and the Emergency Rescue Committee, the American aid organizati­on that had sent him to Europe. Davenport took a shine to Rosenberg, who was said to have reminded her of her brother, and whom she dubbed “Gussie.”

Together they went to Marseille, a port city teeming with refugees where

Fry made his headquarte­rs. Introduced by Davenport, Rosenberg became a courier for Fry’s operations, although his duties soon grew considerab­ly. A polyglot, he spoke French as well as German and Polish, among other languages. Although approachin­g 20, he appeared almost childlike, and thus would attract little suspicion.

“The boy’s face picked up the light from everywhere, even in my dim little room,” Mary Jayne Gold, a key financial backer of Fry’s effort, wrote in a memoir quoted by the New York Times. “His cheeks were pink and high and his hair was a ruddy blond . . . . In fact, he looked like a fox, a nice little fox . . . .

The boy was young and curious.”

Among other jobs, Rosenberg ferried supplies for the production of false identity cards. “The first time I was on this mission, realizing that I carried a bunch of fakes with me, I kept looking over my shoulder to make sure I wasn’t being followed,” he wrote in his 2020 memoir “The Art of Resistance: My Four Years in the French Undergroun­d,” excerpts of which appeared on the website Literary Hub.

“Just to be on the safe side,” he continued, “before going back to the ERC [Emergency Rescue Committee] office, I darted into a big department store with many entrances and exits, ran out again, and jumped onto a bus just as it drove off, a maneuver I’d seen in spy movies.”

Rosenberg personally assisted in the escape of the writer Franz Werfel; his wife, Alma Mahler (the widow of composer Gustav Mahler); the novelist Heinrich Mann; and his wife, Nelly. Lacking the exit visas needed to leave France, they trekked over the Pyrenees into Spain.

“On the ride back I gave some thought to what I was doing . . .” Rosenberg wrote. “There were many practical matters involved in getting people safely out of France. It required a lot of money, a lot of planning, and a lot of people to carry out the tasks that made rescue possible. I think of these people as the spearcarri­ers in an army. It seems I was to be a spearcarri­er in the struggle for freedom.”

After Fry was forced to suspend his operations in 1941, Rosenberg joined the French resistance in Grenoble. He was arrested in a roundup in August 1942 and placed in a camp near Lyon from which, he learned, he was to be sent to a labor camp in Poland.

“In the face of danger,” he wrote, “I make plans to act.”

He faked an illness – so convincing­ly that he was admitted to a hospital and his appendix was removed. While he was convalesci­ng, the undergroun­d secretly supplied him with a new set of clothes and a bicycle, which allowed him to escape before he could be deported.

Rosenberg later joined the U.S. Army, which gave him a Bronze Star Medal, a Purple Heart and a leg up in his effort to reach the United States, where he arrived in 1946. He was reunited in 1952 with his parents and sister, who had survived the war and made their way to Israel.

In the United States, Rosenberg enrolled at the University of Cincinnati, where he received a PhD in 1950. He taught at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvan­ia before joining the New School and Bard, where he continued teaching for years even after taking emeritus status.

His wife of 24 years, the former Karin Kraft, of Rhinebeck, is his only immediate survivor. In 2011, they founded the Justus and Karin Rosenberg Foundation to combat hatred and antisemiti­sm.

Rosenberg was believed to be the last surviving member of the rescue operation led by Fry, who died in 1967 with his deeds largely unrecogniz­ed outside France. In 1994, Fry was named Righteous Among the Nations by the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, the first American to be so honored.

Even with his exploits decades in the past, Rosenberg sometimes caught himself unconsciou­sly assuming the postures he had learned in the resistance. “Whenever I have a document or text of special importance, I look for a place to conceal it,” he recounted. “In a restaurant, I try to get a table with my back to the wall, where I can take in the whole room.”

He reflected that he wished he had been able to aid more refugees, and that the dignitarie­s he had managed to help, for all their cultural achievemen­ts, were no different in their hopes and fears than any of the other millions of people, peddlers or professors desperate to escape from Nazi Europe.

Climbing over the Pyrenees, Rosenberg said, he observed that “there are no geniuses, really, only what people make with what they are given – that, and a confluence of circumstan­ces.”

 ?? KENA BETANCUR/AFP TNS ?? The French ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud, awards the French Legion of Honor medal to Justus Rosenberg, professor emeritus of languages and literature at Bard College, at the French Consulate on March 30, 2017, in New York.
KENA BETANCUR/AFP TNS The French ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud, awards the French Legion of Honor medal to Justus Rosenberg, professor emeritus of languages and literature at Bard College, at the French Consulate on March 30, 2017, in New York.

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