Exclusive new 1944 document of Raoul Wallenberg
A passport application from 1944 applied by Raoul Wallenberg at the Riksarkivet, Stockholm
A passport application from 1944 applied by Raoul Wallenberg at the Riksarkivet, Stockholm
A passport application from 1944 applied by Raoul Wallenberg at the Riksarkivet, Stockholm
A major challenge for researchers in the Raoul Wallenberg case has always been how little original documentation about the young Swedish diplomat survives from his adult life before 1944. Few personal letters or other documents have been preserved.
In particular, such papers would fill in important information about Wallenberg’s personal and professional contacts before he was sent to Hungary in July 1944 on a humanitarian mission to aid its Jewish population. Hungary had been formally allied with Nazi Germany since 1940, but Germany had nevertheless moved to occupy the country on March 19, 1944. In a short few months, almost 500,000 Jews were deported to exterminations camps in Poland and Czechoslovakia.
1967 Fredrik von Dardels dagbok 1968 Fredrik von Dardels dagbok 1969 Fredrik von Dardels dagbok
Carl Hamilton skriver om svenska riksdagens dubbla budskap om Raoul Wallenbergs anda. http://www.dn.se/debatt/wallenbergs-anda-finns-inte-i-riksdagen
Auravägen 25 Djursholm Kära Docent Villius, Samtidigt som jag ber at få tacka för återställandes av Freeds “The Strange Case of Raoul Wallenberg”. Det lilla häftet med akvareller och “Marsch – Wallenberg”, vill jag uttrycka min besvikelse att manuskriptet till…
In a recent article Susanne Berger describes the days after Raoul Wallenberg and his driver Vilmos Langfelder were arrested by the soviets, January 17th 1945. They were sent to the Lubyanka prison in Moscow and in july 23 1947 Raoul Wallenberg was…
Anatoly Prokopenko, who headed the Special Archive concerning documents from 20 different countries in Europe, says in 1991, he saw files in the KGB archive concerning Raoul Wallenberg and count Mikhail Tolstoy-Kutuzov, who followed Raoul Wallenberg to report to his handlers…
2012 marks the 100th anniversary of the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, who saved thousands of Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz at the end of World War II and later was arrested by Soviet counterintelligence. More about the russian article
En berättelse om kampen för liv i andra världskrigets slutskede i staden där nazisterna lyckades inte genomföra sitt mål att förinta judarna. Detta är också berättelsen om några av de största svenska hjältarna under 1900-talet, Raoul Wallenberg. Läs mer om Skymning i Budapest>