Letters and Dispatches 1924-1944: The Man Who Saved Over 100,000 Jews, Centennial Edition

Letters and Dispatches 1924-1944: The Man Who Saved Over 100,000 Jews, Centennial Edition

by Raoul Wallenberg
Letters and Dispatches 1924-1944: The Man Who Saved Over 100,000 Jews, Centennial Edition

Letters and Dispatches 1924-1944: The Man Who Saved Over 100,000 Jews, Centennial Edition

by Raoul Wallenberg

eBookProprietary (Proprietary)

$11.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The best way to hear the story of Raoul Wallenberg is through his own words. Put together from three different collections, Letters and Dispatches is the most thorough book of Wallenberg’s writings and letters. With his disappearance behind the Iron Curtain in January of 1945, he became tragically mysterious. While the story of Wallenberg has been told many times over, the best way we can possibly understand and relate to him is through his written word, which Letters and Dispatches has in full.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781628721768
Publisher: Arcade
Publication date: 10/01/2011
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Raoul Wallenberg was born in 1912 and grew up as part of a distinguished banking family in Sweden. At his grandfather’s behest, he spent much of his young adulthood abroad and received a degree in architecture from the University of Michigan in 1935. After his grandfather’s death in 1937, Wallenberg returned to Europe. He was approached in 1944 to oversee a rescue operation of Hungarian Jews being deported to the death camps by Adolf Eichmann. By the time of his arrest by the Soviet army on January 17, 1945, roughly six months later, Wallenberg had helped to save the lives of over 100,000 people.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

LETTERS

* * *

1924–1944

INTRODUCTION

* * *

Raoul Wallenberg's story continues to fascinate the whole world, and much has been written about his courage and achievements, though his tragic disappearance — despite all the efforts by so many people for so many years — remains a mystery.

For most, who Raoul Wallenberg was before he went to Budapest in July of 1944 is as mysterious as what happened to him after his arrest by the Soviet army. What drove an anonymous Stockholm businessman to leave his safe, neutral country and embark on one of the most perilous missions ever undertaken — wresting Jews marked for deportation from the clutches of Adolf Eichmann and his henchmen?

A fortuitous discovery made a few years ago sheds some light on the development of Raoul's character: a collection of letters covering his early school years, his university years, and his travels during the first half of the 1930s. The collection consists mainly of correspondence between Raoul and his paternal grandfather, Gustaf Oscar Wallenberg. Raoul's relationship with his grandfather profoundly influenced him. His father, a second lieutenant in the Swedish navy, had died of cancer before he was born. His mother Maj, daughter of a physician, received all conceivable support from both sides of her family. But her father-in-law Gustaf took special interest in Raoul, whose father had been his only son.

Gustaf Wallenberg's father, André Oscar Wallenberg — Raoul's great-grandfather — founded the Stockholms Enskilda Banken, sometimes referred to as SEB, the cornerstone of the Wallenberg wealth. The Wallenbergs were extraordinarily successful; indeed, their banking empire has hardly been equaled in Sweden. Like his siblings (he was one of thirteen children) Gustaf was raised to be part of an elite, a member of a family that had contributed more than had any other to transforming his native land from a backward agrarian society into a modern industrialized country. But there was never much outward display of this success. To Be — Not To Be Seen was the motto on the family crest. Among themselves, however, there was an enormous sense of pride. Wallenbergs were brought up to believe that whatever they touched would turn into gold.

Like all the Wallenberg men, Gustaf, the most extroverted of his brothers, was exposed to the banking world but had difficulties adjusting to the sheltered life that accompanied it. Until he settled upon diplomacy as a career, Gustaf was something of a jack-of-all-trades: a naval officer, ship owner, builder of railroads, and politician. One of his first jobs was overseeing the day-to-day operations of the Wallenberg family's Saltsjòbaden railway project. He repeatedly proved his unusual ability to see things in their totality and to remove any obstacle that stood in the way of progress. The Saltsjö railway was completed far ahead of schedule because of the new blasting techniques Gustaf introduced. He even operated the steam engines himself on occasion.

A famous seaside hotel at Saltsjòbaden (which would later play a decisive role in his grandson's destiny) also bears the stamp of Gustaf's energy and character. During the final stages of the hotel's construction, he decided the structure wasn't grand enough and ordered the architect to add another story. This was done. Gustaf's can-do attitude was in part inspired by his experiences in America. He often talked about how much he admired American drive and practicality, which was why he hoped that Raoul would attend school there.

The Wallenbergs were on excellent terms with the Swedish royal family, and during the dissolution of Sweden's political union with Norway, King Oscar sent Gustaf to London to explain the Swedish position to the British, who perceived the Swedish actions as defeatist. So successful was Gustaf that King Oscar immediately offered him the post of Swedish envoy to London. Instead, Gustaf asked to be sent to Asia, a part of the world he had been studying since inaugurating the Swedish Oriental Line. The king granted his request, and Gustaf spent many happy and successful years as Swedish ambassador to Japan and China. In 1920 he was named ambassador to Turkey, where he remained after his retirement.

Gustaf was very much a product of the nationalist bourgeois circles of Sweden of the late nineteenth century. The turn of the century saw rapid industrial and commercial development all over the world. Gustaf believed in looking at the whole picture, and he had a knack for making valuable contacts. He was a tireless correspondent and accomplished at letter writing, a skill upon which he relied heavily and with considerable success. Over the years he built up a worldwide network of friends and contacts. When the time was right he intended to use them to help his grandson make his way in the world.

Gustaf Wallenberg's later letters reflect growing disappointment with the course of events in his country. He composed articles for the Swedish newspapers advocating a more open trade policy, but they were effectively ignored. Gustaf was frustrated with insular, hidebound ways of doing things. He was the impulsive doer of the Wallenbergs, forever advocating reform and change. He found his brothers Knut and Marcus, the family's leading bankers, overly preoccupied with their own projects and worries, and his relationship with them deteriorated. It didn't help matters that on a couple of occasions financial difficulties forced him to seek their help. Their aid was reluctant and coupled with admonitions about how he should conduct himself. By the beginning of the 1930s, Gustaf found himself estranged from his closest family in Sweden and retired, though he was still full of plans. His vision of the world was one of growing markets and steady improvement in the quality of life, a world reflecting the values [for all its flaws] of the Swedish system: relations with countries based on trade relations rather than on military alliances.

Gustaf was a great individualist and completely uninhibited about speaking his mind. This very un-Swedish trait was doubtless a source of irritation to many who could tolerate the Wallenbergs' power and influence so long as it was accompanied by personal modesty. Gustaf Wallenberg, by contrast, was self-confident to the point of being very judgmental of his fellow man. In his opinion, Swedes were more honest, reliable, and capable than citizens of other countries, particularly if the Swedes came from a good family.

His views on women were not nearly as enlightened as his views on trade. They were pleasant company, perhaps, but otherwise calculating and troublesome. Raoul's grandmother Annie, née Adelsköld, occasionally figures in Gustaf's correspondence, but has no active voice in the dialogue between grandfather and grandson. "They just want to display us with the best china in the parlor, where they kill us with their caring," Gustaf wrote in a letter. For her part, Annie created a world of her own by getting out from beneath the shadow of her domineering husband. She eventually moved home to Sweden by herself and devoted her energies to tending the enormous garden of the magnificent villa in Saltsjòbaden. She occasionally went to Istanbul to see her husband, but for the most part lived on memories of her time in Japan and constructed a miniature world around herself with all of the objects she had brought back. When Gustaf visited Sweden, he usually stayed at the Grand Hotel in Stockholm, visiting Saltsjöbaden only on rare occasions. The marriage between Gustaf and Annie was nevertheless regarded as happy by the rest of the family, and they maintained a very tender and loving correspondence.

By the time he was a teenager, Raoul was exhibiting certain of his grandfather's traits: his honesty, his powers of observation, and especially his love of language. Raoul's letters reveal him to be a shrewd and frank judge of human behavior, his own included. Gustaf became increasingly fond of his grandson and increasingly involved in planning a future for him. Typically, he had strong feelings on the subject. He wanted to free Raoul of the comfortable assumptions of the Swedish bourgeois and transform him into a citizen of the world — someone who with the help of training, initiative, and, above all, good contacts would be a leader in a global society. Going to America would be key.

One might have expected differences of opinion between Raoul's mother and Gustaf over Raoul's education after high school, and in particular over Gustaf's plan to send eighteen-year-old Raoul abroad. We know that Maj von Dardel — she had married Fredrik von Dardel in 1918, six years after Raoul's birth — was a strong-willed woman (after Raoul's disappearance, she was the guiding force behind efforts to find him until her death). But the letters show that Maj concurred with her former father-in-law's thinking. She could even prove less protective than Gustaf. By the summer of 1934, Raoul had been in America for almost three years and Gustaf thought he should return to spend some time in Sweden. But a cable from Maj shows that she gave her consent for Raoul to undertake an adventurous, even slightly reckless, drive through Mexico. Gustaf relented.

The main body of this correspondence begins in 1929, when Raoul's mother and grandfather were busy planning for the boy's future. He was then in his junior year of high school. Along with literature, drawing was his best subject, and he himself had decided to study architecture — as indeed he did — a decision supported by his entire family. These early letters not only testify to the attention lavished on Raoul by his mother and grandfather, as well as illustrating an upbringing both internationalist yet firmly rooted in the family, but reveal Raoul's imaginativeness and self-reliance. He was later to use those qualities to heroic effect.

The correspondence peters out in 1936. Raoul had completed his grandfather's program of study and was anxious to get going in life, helped in part by the contacts in the financial world Gustaf was to give him. Gustaf's death in March 1937 meant that Raoul had to take things into his own hands. These were difficult years. The letters Raoul wrote after Gustaf's death suggest he felt like an outsider among his contemporaries, and that he found Stockholm social life somewhat stultifying. He entered some architectural competitions and eventually became involved in an export business. By the beginning of 1944 he had established contacts in Hungary and visited the country several times, even during the height of the war. Raoul's business activity brought him into contact with Jewish businessmen there, as well as with the shipowner Sven Salén, and it was through them and his Hungarian business partner Kálmán Lauer that he made contact with a representative of the U.S. War Refugee Board, then returned to Budapest for an altogether different kind of enterprise.

We are extremely pleased that these letters are being published in the United States. The years Raoul spent in America, studying at the University of Michigan and traveling around, were critical to the development of his character, and we believe that the documents will therefore prove of particular interest and value to an American audience. Sending their young men abroad for travel or study had long been a family tradition among the Wallenbergs. It was a way of giving them some measure of the world and of themselves. Nonetheless, no one in this very large family ventured as far, or stayed as long on his own, as Raoul, and the experience had a profound influence.

We are also pleased this correspondence is appearing because it presents such an extraordinary relationship between generations. Until we stumbled on the correspondence — the existence of which we had no clue — we had been unaware of the strength and intimacy of the bond between grandson and grandfather. At a time of crisis in families everywhere, these documents are more than simply poignant mementos of a different age, but testimony to the effect such a relationship can have on both generations. Gustaf Wallenberg, as you shall see, played a major role in who Raoul Wallenberg was to become.

These letters were discovered in collections belonging to Gustaf Wallenberg's daughters, Karin Falkman and Nita Wallenberg, our mother. Those by Raoul are originals; those by Gustaf are copies and generally unsigned.

Gustaf Sòderlund Gitte Wallenberg
Uppsala and Granada, June 1994

BROBY [DATE UNKOWN] 1924

Dearest Grandfather,

At the moment I am staying with my cousins at Broby. It rains a lot almost every day. A few days ago we went across Kolmården to an ironworks called Näfvekvarn where they make pans, stoves, and all kinds of things. We went swimming there and had lots of fun. We were going to swim out to an island nearby but Uncle Carl said that it was too far. We swam there anyway, and after a while I was going to see how deep it was and put my foot down and scraped it against a rock. I found that the water only came up to my knees. Then I discovered that you could wade from the mainland all the way out to the island. This Saturday we are going down to Lake Vättern, Gränna, and Eksjö in Uncle Carl's car a terrific new Voisin.

Everybody sends their love especially Grandfather's own little Raoul.

[Broby Manor was located in Södermanland (the southern province of Sweden) and owned by Carl Nisser ("Uncle Carl) and his wife Anna, the sister ofRW's mother, Maj von Dardel. There were four Nisser children, Raoul's cousins, of whom Gosta and Maj — whose married name was von Plauen — will be mentioned subsequently.]

STOCKHOLM OCTOBER 11, 1928

Dear Grandfather and Grandmother,

Please forgive these hasty lines. I have a lot of tests coming up soon, but I am expecting to have more time off, and I'll have more time to write then. Last night I went to the golden anniversary celebration at Saltsjöbaden. It was very nice, with beautiful music and singing, which I suppose Mother has written you about. It is too bad that we don't have parties like that more often, for that is actually the only time the whole family is all together. Thank you, Grandfather and Grandmother, for inviting me to the party. I also owe Grandmother thanks for a letter and a postcard. I will write again later.

Raoul

[Knut and Alice Wallenberg — RW's great-aunt and uncle — celebrated their golden wedding anniversary with a family dinner at Hotel Saltsjöbaden. Knut had been Sweden's foreign minister during World War I.]

CONSTANTINOPLE APRIL 19,1929

Dear Maj,

My congratulations on Nina's becoming an heiress. I always thought Mrs. Augusta terribly ugly, and because of that assumed she was not particularly nice, but I find that in this case — as in probably many others — I was mistaken. She turned out to have both a good heart and good sense. It was very generous of her to remember little Nina, even though she may not prove desirable on the market. Still — it is rather significant, and will doubtless serve to ease a young girl's anxiety once she is grown and about to choose a husband.

I am pleased that everything is proceeding well with Raoul. We will have to start giving our thoughts to what might most benefit him during the coming summer. If you have any ideas, please let me know. One might be to have him pay another visit to the English clergyman, who seems interested in doing his best by the boy. If you have anything else in mind, however, don't let the idea of the clergyman stand in the way.

It is also time to start talking about his future architecture studies. I assume that Raoul is still interested in it as a profession, and it is one I approve of since it is constructive. The idea behind going to America is that he would learn there, better than here at home, the importance of good organization. I don't mean to say that he should stay there. On the contrary. Just that the experience he acquires in America will give him an edge in the fierce competition that later he will encounter from his colleagues here at home.

I have spoken to Axel about this, and he thinks that I am basically right but that in his opinion a Swedish architecture education is superior to an American one, and that a graduate of the Royal Institute of Technology could easily find employment in the United States. He therefore thinks it would be better to get him trained here and then send him to America to find a job. There may be something to this, but Axel's idea is geared to future employment over there and thus is directly opposed to mine, which is that Raoul would be well prepared for a career here in Sweden. I assume, of course, that you and I see eye-to-eye as to which alternative we prefer, since we would not want to be deprived of the pleasure of having the dear boy around in our old age. I am therefore acting on the assumption that we should investigate the possibilities of an education at an American school. Axel may be right in thinking that the training itself may be better here, and I don't want to underrate the importance of the best possible foundation, but it remains a fact that training is only the beginning. Success depends less on studies than on talent and practical skills. The most studious member of our class at the naval academy, Erik Leijonhufvud, is now a judge somewhere in the provinces, while most of the others have scaled to greater heights.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Letters And Dispatches 1924–1944"
by .
Copyright © 1995 Birgitte Wallenberg and Gustaf Sòderlund.
Excerpted by permission of Skyhorse Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Editor's Note,
Wallenberg Family Tree,
Letters, 1924-1944,
Introduction to Letters by Birgitte Wallenberg and Gustaf Söderlund,
Letters,
Dispatches, July 18-December 12, 1944,
Introduction to Dispatches by Per Anger,
Dispatches,
Final Letters,
Afterword by Rachel Oestreicher Haspel,
Selected Bibliography,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews