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Raoul Wallenberg

The Heroic Life and Mysterious Disappearance of the Man Who Saved Thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An honorary citizen of the United States and Canada, and designated as one of the Righteous Among the Nations by Israel, Raoul Wallenberg was a modest envoy to Hungary whose heroism in Budapest at the height of the Holocaust saved countless Jewish lives, and ultimately cost him his own.
A series of unlikely coincidences led to the appointment of Wallenberg, by trade a poultry importer, as Sweden's Special Envoy to Budapest in 1944. With remarkable bravery, Wallenberg created a system of protective passports, and sheltered thousands of desperate Jews in buildings he claimed were Swedish libraries and research institutes. As the war drew to a close, his invaluable work almost complete, Wallenberg voluntarily went to meet with the Soviet troops who were relieving the city. Arrested as a spy, Wallenberg disappeared into the depths of the Soviet system, never to be seen again.
In this definitive biography, noted journalist Ingrid Carlberg has carried out unprecedented research into all elements of Wallenberg's life, narrating with vigor and insight the story of a heroic life, and navigating with wisdom and sensitivity the truth about his disappearance and death.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 25, 2016
      Swedish journalist Carlberg gives Wallenberg, only the second person ever to be made an honorary U.S. citizen, the definitive biography he deserves. In 1944, the 32-year-old Swedish businessman was appointed his country's special envoy to Budapest, where his courage and ingenuity enabled him to rescue thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis. Carlberg builds up to that moment with a detailed, absorbing account of Wallenberg's life, starting with his fatherless childhood and covering his schooling in America. She also provides an unflinching look at Sweden's attitudes toward oppressed Jews after Kristallnacht ("Once again Sweden lived up to its reputation as the golden land of the political middle way or, rather, political cowardice"). Carlberg adds fascinating anecdotes about Wallenberg's life, but the main interest, of course, remains how he rescued people: concocting fake documents and risking death. His exploits are made more poignant by his ambiguous fate following his 1945 arrest by the Soviets on Stalin's order. Carlberg's extensive research, including interviews with surviving members of Wallenberg's family, enables her to craft a narrative that will be eye-opening even for those who know the contours of this heroic story.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from December 15, 2015
      The making of an unlikely hero. To his prominent and wealthy relatives, Raoul Wallenberg (b. 1912) seemed not dependable enough to entrust with a responsible position in the family's bank. As journalist Carlberg depicts him in this absorbing, masterful biography, Wallenberg was "charming, extroverted and creative, but also somewhat impulsive." "He was very much a salesman," a friend recalled. "He was almost always happy. And funny," amusing his friends, in the 1930s, with imitations of Hitler, Churchill, and Stalin. After training as an architect at the University of Michigan and then working in South Africa and Haifa, Wallenberg returned to his native Sweden to seek employment. In 1941, he became an instructor in the National Home Guard, earning praise for being "more skilled and creative...than many of the career military." Soon, he found a paying job as foreign director of a Swedish food import company owned by a Hungarian Jew. That was the position he held when, in June 1944, he was tapped to carry out a rescue mission for the American War Refugee Board, in alliance with Sweden. Multilingual, with high-level Hungarian business contacts, he seemed the perfect person: "highly skilled, of good reputation, [and] a non-Jew." Only Stockholm's chief rabbi was skeptical, concerned that Wallenberg's real motivation was "a desire for adventure." Carlberg's tense, detailed narrative traces Wallenberg's work in Budapest, beginning in July 1944. Starting with a handful of employees, by year's end, he had 300. His talent at diplomacy--he had dinner with the furious, alcoholic Adolph Eichmann--was matched with bold subterfuge, as he managed to put huge numbers of Jews under Swedish protection. But efforts to exterminate them were relentless. Wallenberg placed his hopes in the Russians; although Soviet troops freed over 100,000 Jews living in a sealed ghetto, in 1945, Wallenberg was arrested as a spy and disappeared. A riveting biography of a remarkable man.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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