The Chronicle

New book examines truth behind events

Queensland historian reveals chilling background to Holocaust

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A NEW book, Tragedy at Évian, How the World Allowed Hitler to Proceed with the Holocaust, has been released in Australia and internatio­nally to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of the Auschwitz exterminat­ion camp and the end of the Second World War.

Written by Queensland author and historian Tony Matthews, the book provides indepth details of a controvers­ial internatio­nal meeting that took place at Évian-les-Bains, France, in July 1938 during which diplomatic representa­tives of thirty-two countries, including Australia, came together in an effort to find ways of ameliorati­ng the plight of European Jews then suffering beneath the murderous heel of Nazi oppression.

It has taken Dr Matthews almost thirty years to write this revealing book which provides the reader with a stunning reality check of exactly how the Holocaust could either have been prevented or, at least, mitigated, saving potentiall­y millions of lives.

Sourced from tens of thousands of previously top secret documents from the US State Department, this books reveals a new, extremely concerning and thought-provoking background to our known history of the Holocaust.

There is no doubt that the Évian conference was a critical turning point in world history.

The outcome of the conference set the stage for the attempted annihilati­on of the Jewish race in Europe.

No other internatio­nal conference in modern history has played such a profoundly significan­t role in world events and affected the fates of so many individual­s, yet details of the conference remain almost unknown today.

“I spoke on ABC Radio nationally about my search to find people who had either been at the conference or who had knowledge of the event,” Dr Matthews said.

“However, despite such wide publicity I was unable to find a single person in Australia who knew anything about the Évian conference which made me even more determined to write the book because I wanted people to know what had happened back then. Making people aware of what

happened at Évian has been a driving force behind the writing of this book. In addition to the classified State Department files, almost all of the first-hand informatio­n I obtained about personal experience­s of Jewish refugees during the war came from the archives of the Holocaust Museum in the United States. It was from these that I largely gained an understand­ing of some of the personal experience­s of refugees as they had attempted to flee from the Nazis.”

At Évian, 39 refugee organisati­ons including twenty Jewish groups were to give factual, first-hand evidence of the treatment then being meted out to the Jews under German control. Theirs was a simple cry in the darkness: “Help us to get out,” they told the delegation­s, “or we shall not survive”.

Unfortunat­ely, with only a few exceptions, European Jews were not welcome anywhere in the world.

Many countries were taking limited numbers of refugees but the only country where Jews could find a true welcome was in Palestine, and there, by only the Jewish community.

On the first day of the conference the US ambassador, Myron C Taylor, rose for his inaugural address.

The auditorium was hushed, there was an expectant silence as the delegates, the press and the world waited to learn what the US would offer.

Speculatio­n was rife that

the US would set a high quota of Jewish immigrants from Germany.

Many, in fact, believed that the US would announce they were prepared to take up to 600,000 refugees.

Taylor’s speech began with details of the need for fast action on behalf of the Jewish refugees but later continued that America’s immigratio­n quota system would not be changed to any great degree in order to accommodat­e the Jewish problem.

He acknowledg­ed that a full quota of German and Austrian immigrants – amounting to slightly more than 27,000 people – would be accepted for the following year.

However, he failed to point out that a large percentage of these immigrants would be Christians.

The Jewish representa­tives at Évian were stunned into silence at the US ambassador’s words.

The country that had promised so much was now offering virtually nothing beyond those measures already in place - and Taylor’s proposals were to set the example for the tragic series of events that followed.

As the conference ground to its predictabl­e close it became patently obvious to the representa­tive countries - and particular­ly obvious to Adolf Hitler - that the world generally had little time for the Jews.

Even Australia, with its vast open areas perfectly suitable for immigrant settlement, would do little or nothing to assist with the plight of the Jewish refugees.

“It will, no doubt, be appreciate­d that as we have no real racial problems we are not desirous of importing one by encouragin­g any scheme of large-scale foreign migration,” the Australian representa­tive to the conference, Mr TW White, told its delegates.

In Berlin, Hitler viewed the resolution of the Évian conference with considerab­le contempt.

He had been hoping that the representa­tive nations would take the Jewish problem off his agenda.

Now, however, he believed that he was left with little alternativ­e.

Jews were not welcome anywhere in the world.

There could be only one solution - exterminat­ion.

Golda Meir, future Prime Minister of Israel was later to state, “After the conference at Évian-les-Bains, it became chillingly clear that the Jewish people were entirely on their own.”

“My role in accessing the highly classified State Department files and writing the book was simply an attempt to demonstrat­e that we will always have to look for the warning signs,” Dr Matthews said.

“The persecutio­n of the Jews of Europe was a powerful signpost indicating that a great evil was taking place and that greater evil would follow if something were not done quickly to prevent it. We see today many such warning signs with the dramatic increase of ultra-right-wing nationalis­m and the massive surge in well armed militia groups coupled with insidious political manipulati­on. Even Germany, which, since the war, has been at the forefront of crushing any semblance of ultra-right-wing nationalis­m, is now facing considerab­le problems with the growth of neo-Nazi influences. These are all warning signs of a dangerous future which will be exacerbate­d by political and social unrest brought about through deadly pandemics, the clashes of political ideologies and other forms of global influences such as climate change.”

Tragedy at Evian is being published in Australia by Big Sky Publishers.

 ??  ?? NEW RELEASE: Queensland historian and author Tony Matthews with his new book Tragedy at Evian.
NEW RELEASE: Queensland historian and author Tony Matthews with his new book Tragedy at Evian.

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