Author Topic: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos  (Read 2741 times)

chicogon

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Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« on: August 31, 2010, 06:00:50 AM »
For saving 1,200 Jews from Holocaust

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20090628-212784/Monument-in-Israel-honors-Filipinos

By Volt Contreras
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:37:00 06/28/2009

Filed Under: War, history


MANILA, Philippines—Before Schindler’s List, there was another document—the Philippine visa—that saved hundreds of Jews from the gas chambers and mass graves of the Holocaust.

In 1939, two years before World War II reached the Pacific, the Commonwealth government under President Manuel L. Quezon allotted 10,000 visas and safe haven to Jews fleeing Nazi Europe. Some 1,200 Jews made it to Manila before the city itself fell to Japanese invaders.

Before sunset on June 21, 70 years later, the first ever monument honoring Quezon and the Filipino nation for this “open door policy” was inaugurated on Israeli soil.

The monument—a geometric, seven-meter-high sculpture titled “Open Doors”—was designed by Filipino artist Junyee (Luis Lee Jr.).

At the program held at the 65-hectare Holocaust Memorial Park in Rishon LeZion, Israel’s fourth largest city south of Tel Aviv, the mere mention of “Taft Avenue” by one of the speakers brought Ralph Preiss to the verge of tears.

Preiss, a father of four now in his 70s, later explained that Taft Avenue was where a synagogue-run soup kitchen provided the first hot meals he had as a refugee. He was eight when he arrived from Rosenberg, Germany, with his parents at the port of Manila on March 23, 1939.

“If I stayed in Germany I would have been killed,” Preiss, a retired engineer living in Connecticut in the United States, told the Inquirer in an interview.

“My cousin who lived in Berlin and whose father was a lawyer went to Paris [instead]. The Paris police handed them over to the Nazis, and they were sent to Auschwitz and got killed,” he recalled, adding:

“I’m very grateful to the Philippines for opening the doors and letting us in.”

‘Salamat sa inyo!’

At the program with an audience of around 300, Max Weissler, glib as a jeepney driver plying the streets of Quiapo, barked onstage: “Thank you! Salamat sa inyo lahat, lahat nandito! Nakapunta kayo lahat! Salamat sa inyo!”

“Unfortunately,” Weissler noted, “very little is known about this great deed of President Quezon and the Filipino people during the Holocaust. Very little is known about this among us Israelis, the Jews around the world, and even in the Philippines.”

Weissler was 11 when he and his German family settled in Pasay City. To eke out a living, his mother baked cakes that his father sold.

They all survived the war, and Weissler went on to fight another by joining the US Army in the Korean War.

“We came to Manila with practically nothing and always found help one way or another from the Filipinos,” Weissler said. “They have an open heart, and this is why we have this monument.”

3 triangles

Junyee won a competition held by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts in February 2007 for the monument project.

He bagged a P300,000 cash prize for his design, which bested seven other entries, including one submitted by a National Artist, according to the Philippine Embassy in Tel Aviv.

Rendered mainly in steel and set on a base of marble tiles shipped from Romblon, the monument depicts three doors of ascending heights (three, five and seven meters).

Viewed from above, Junyee’s work joins together “three triangles”—one representing the triangle of the Philippine flag, and the others signifying the two triangles that form the Star of David in the Israeli flag.

Etched on the marble floor are three sets of “footprints” approaching the doors. The prints are said to be those of Weissler, fellow Jewish refugee George Loewenstein, and Doryliz Goffer, a young Filipino-Israeli born in the Philippines and a granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor.

Modena’s mission

In November 2005, speaking before the Rotary Club of Jerusalem, then Philippine Ambassador to Israel Antonio Modena launched a “campaign for the remembrance of the Philippines’ humanitarian support for the Jews,” according to the Department of Foreign Affairs.

That campaign merely proposed that a marker for the Philippines be placed on the Holocaust Memorial Park’s “Boulevard of the Righteous Among the Nations,” which features a row of red granite blocks with the names of countries and number of persons in each country who saved Jews.

But the response from then Rishon LeZion Mayor Meir Nitzan “surprised” the Philippine mission: Not just a slab of granite but a monument with its own prominent spot in the park was to be built to thank the Philippines and its people.

Technical and financial difficulties delayed the completion of the monument for two years; Modena and Nitzan originally set the inauguration in 2007 to mark the golden anniversary of Philippine-Israeli relations.

Modena died of lung cancer in February 2007. His name is first on the dedication plaque unveiled at the “Open Doors” monument on June 21.

Modena’s campaign was said to have been inspired by the 2003 book “Escape to Manila: From Nazi Tyranny to Japanese Terror” by Frank Ephraim.

The 246-page eyewitness account gathers the voices of 36 refugees, who described in detail their arduous journeys to Manila, the lives they tried to build, and their fresh ordeals under Japanese rule.

Born in Berlin, Ephraim was eight when he fled to Manila with his parents in 1939. After the war he immigrated to the United States, began a career in naval architecture and later worked with the US Department of Transportation.

Ephraim died in August 2006. “He was very attached to the Philippines and was very anxious to go back there. We were supposed to go, and then he got lung cancer and that was the end of it. It was just too bad,” said his American widow Ruth, another special guest at the inaugural.

Filipino pride

Tourism Secretary Joseph Durano, who attended the inaugural on the invitation of the Israeli government, shared passages from the book which, he said, “made me proud to be a Filipino.”

Quoting Ephraim, Durano read: “Filipinos were a tolerant people who never interfered or took any action against the Jews. [Their temple] on Taft Avenue was very visible and Jews attended services and congregated in front of the temple without the slightest disturbance.

“There was never a ghetto in Manila, and Jews lived in close proximity with Filipinos, and all sides introduced neighbors to each other’s cuisine, music, culture and history.”

According to Durano, the “Open Doors” monument “celebrates the most powerful force on earth, second only to God’s will, and that is the human will.”

“It was just amazing, the will of these Jewish families who escaped to Manila. Some had to go through Siberia, some had to take boats for weeks and months,” he said.

But also, Durano said, the monument “celebrates the Filipino heart ... a heart that touches others with compassion, a heart that makes one a blessing to the world.”

Other links:

http://www.filamako.com/2010/08/open-doors-monument-in-israel-honoring-filipinos/

http://manilamymanila.wordpress.com/

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pioneer

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Re: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2010, 10:10:55 AM »
Thank you, Chicogon, for posting this article. My eyes become teary as I read the article. Truly this is an unknown portion of Philippine history. I wish to get hold of a copy of Frank Ephraim's book.

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chicogon

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Re: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2010, 02:13:16 PM »
Thank you, Chicogon, for posting this article. My eyes become teary as I read the article. Truly this is an unknown portion of Philippine history. I wish to get hold of a copy of Frank Ephraim's book.

You're welcome. I wasn't sure if someone already posted said article in the past. I just saw it today on Facebook.

Same here ( :'()... If I can find one I'll get you one...  ;)

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Scarb

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Re: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2010, 05:33:43 PM »
    

   
Above: inauguration of the Marikina Residence Hall for Jewish refugees

for further details visit "The Nut Books"
http://thenutbox.i.ph/blogs/thenutbox/2008/01/28/the-holocaust-and-the-philippines/

Monument to Filipinos rises in Israel

This year marks another milestone for the cordial ties between the State of Israel and the Republic of the Philippines with the dedication of “Open Doors” monument on June 21, 2009. Secretary Joseph Durano of the Department of Tourism is set to fly to Israel to be the Guest of Honor at the said inaugural ceremony which will take place at the Rishon Lezion Holocaust Memorial Park.

The “Open Doors” monument, which is the first Philippine monument to rise in Israel, commemorates the courage, hospitality and the determination of the Philippine Government through President Manuel L. Quezon to give humanitarian support for the European Jews seeking refuge from the Holocaust in the 1930s.

Through President Quezon’s open door policy in 1939, thousands of Jews escaped the Nazi horror and found refuge in the Philippines. (Preparations were made to accept 10,000 Jews a year, but only 1,200 made it to Manila.  Sixty-seven Jewish refugees were among the 100,000 Manila residents who died during the 1945 US liberation of Manila and the heavy bombing that preceded it, which also destroyed Manila’s only synagogue, Temple Emil.)

The warm hospitality of the Filipino people undoubtedly shed light to one of the darkest and most difficult period in Jewish history. Fortunately, memoirs of such episodes were documented by Frank Ephraim, a Holocaust survivor himself, through his book “Escape to Manila.”

In 2005, this same book literally opened the doors for the creation of the “Open Doors” monument through the initiative of former Ambassador Antonio Modena. This commemorative project, which was approved to rise in the city of Rishon LeZion (fourth largest city in Israel), took four years in the making as the Philippine and Israeli government, together with Filipino and Jewish business accolades, painstakingly combined their forces in order to bring Ambassador Modena’s vision into fruition.

Though Ambassador Modena passed away in February 2007, his intent to remember the values and hospitality shown by the Filipino people to the Jews at least 70 years ago persisted. The “Open Doors” monument overflowed with support by the Filipino and Jewish communities, especially those who are witnesses of the iconic Filipino hospitality.

Indeed, the “Open Doors” monument will continue to be a living legacy of the Filipino generosity and humanitarian assistance to the Jews. A lasting symbol which also commemorates more than 50 years of friendship between Israel and the Philippines.

(Courtesy of Embassy of Israel in the Philippines )

~~~~~~~~
 THANKS Pads Chic for starting this thread  8)


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Scarb

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Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons of wise men. ~ Thomas Henry Huxley~

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Lorenzo

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Re: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« Reply #5 on: August 31, 2010, 07:42:10 PM »
Schindler was once told by a rabii (in regards to his saving hundreds of jews): "When you save one man, you save the whole world."

God Bless the Philippines. God Bless Israel and the Jewish People..

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cujo

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Re: Monument In Israel Honors Filipinos
« Reply #6 on: August 31, 2010, 09:46:38 PM »
One more important information Iv'e learned about our country.Thanks for posting it.

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