Varian Fry Institute

dedicated to Americans Who Cared

The Varian Fry Institute is sponsored by the Chambon Foundation

       Mary Jayne Gold
Mary Jayne Gold
(1909-1997)
prior to World War II

Varian Fry
Varian Fry (1907-1967)
(1942 photo by refugee Hans Namuth)

Miriam Davenport Ebel
Miriam Davenport Ebel
(1915-1999)
prior to World War II

     Charles Fawcett
Charles Fawcett
revisits Marseille in 1997


Hiram Bingham IV (1903-1988)
righteous vice-consul in 1940-41, stamp issued in May 2006

Leon ("Dick") Ball

 

“In all we saved some two thousand human beings.  We ought to have saved many times that number.  But we did what we could.”

                                                                         Varian Fry

 

Varian Fry in Marseille—why he matters

"Viewed within the context of its times, Fry's mission seems not "merely" an attempt to save some threatened writers, artists, and political figures. It appears in hindsight like a doomed final quest to reverse the very direction in which the worldand not merely the Naziswas heading."

And Crown Thy Good

                                       Varian Fry in Marseille

an upcoming documentary (2013)

screenings of excerpts from the work-in-progress have begun

Time for a stamp of approval?

On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Varian Fry's birth,
we joined in asking the Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee
to consider recommending that a stamp be pressingly issued in his honor.

In a challenging time, Varian Fry, Miriam Davenport Ebel, Mary Jayne Gold, Charles Fawcett, Leon Ball and Hiram Bingham IV, were Americans who joined with others in the U.S. and in Marseille, France, to further brotherhood from sea to shining sea...

Among those others were husband-and-wife Rev. Waitstill Sharp and Martha Sharp.  We congratulate their families, as well as the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee which they helped found in 1940, for joining Varian Fry in June 2006 as American Righteous Among the Nations.

We believe that at least six other non-Jews who worked with Varian Fry in Marseille would also be worthy of being recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Israel's Yad Vashem memorial:

  • Daniel Bénédite, France
  • Hiram Bingham IV, USA
  • Miriam Davenport Ebel, USA
  • Charles Fawcett, USA
  • Jean Gemähling, France
  • Mary Jayne Gold, USA

We are sad to announce two recent deaths "in the family":

In February 1941, in Marseille, France, an American wrote to his wife back in New York:

Among the people who have come into my office, or with whom I am in constant correspondence, are not only some of the greatest living authors, painters, sculptors of Europe . . . but also former cabinet ministers and even prime ministers of half a dozen countries.  What a strange place Europe is when men like this are reduced to waiting patiently in the anteroom of a young American of no importance whatever.

Varian Fry, the young American, was 32 when he arrived in Marseille early in the morning of Aug. 14, 1940—only two months after France's traumatizing defeat by the Nazis, and a full year and a half before Americans finally allowed themselves to get dragged into the war.

In that summer of 1940, high-level Nazis were talking among themselves about the need for a final solution to the Jewish question, but there is no evidence that anybody was seriously thinking of mass murder.  Throughout the coming year, the German policy would remain one of emigration and resettlement.

What was possible when Fry arrived in Europe would, however, no longer be possible by the time Fry left Europe at the end of October 1941.  By then, it wouldn’t only be the doors of the U. S. and other Western countries that were largely closed to refugees; the doors of departure from Europe would be shut too, and the Final Solution would be underway.

These are the circumstances in which a New York intellectual led what we know to have been the most determined and successful private American rescue operation during World War II.  At a time of tragic American apathy about the refugee crisis in Europe, Varian Fry was assisted locally in his struggle by other singular and similarly non-Jewish Americans: the late Miriam Davenport Ebel, the late Mary Jayne Gold, Charles Fawcett, the late Leon Ball, the late righteous consul Hiram Bingham IV.

Banding together with Jewish and non-Jewish refugees from the Third Reich, as well as early French opponents to Vichy, this tiny group, with erratic assistance from colleagues in New York, may have helped to save as many as 2,000 people: Marc Chagall, Max Ernst, Jacques Lipchitz, Heinrich Mann, Franz Werfel, Alma Mahler Werfel, André Breton, Victor Serge, André Masson, Lion Feuchtwanger, Konrad Heiden, Marcel Duchamp, Hannah Arendt, Max Ophuls, Walter Mehring, Jean Malaquais, Valeriu Marcu, Remedios Varo, Otto Meyerhof…  The list—Fry’s list—goes on and on.

“There is a fire sale on brains going on here, and we aren’t taking full advantage of it,” an American official in Lisbon told Fry in August 1940, long before the Holocaust became established as a metaphor.  Even if many of the names on Fry’s list have faded into relative obscurity, the list as a whole represents much of the intelligentsia of Europe at that time; the population shifts Fry helped produce would have major ramifications for American culture.

Though Fry was not specifically concerned with saving Jews—and indeed the German and Austrian anti-Nazi émigrés in France then seemed the most vulnerable of all, whether Jewish or not—Fry became in 1998 the first American singled out to be honored as a Righteous Among the Nations by Israel’s Yad Vashem, the Jerusalem memorial to the Holocaust.

Many basic facts about the man and his mission are still unfamiliar even to scholars, while some of what is “known” is in fact erroneous or misleading.  Furthermore, there have been no attempts as yet to place the rescue effort in its full historical context.

Filling some of these gaps and drawing on extensive research and over one hundred and fifty interviews conducted for the author’s upcoming feature documentary, And Crown Thy Good: Varian Fry in Marseille, this account of the mission will lead naturally enough to some fundamental questions about what we are to make of it, what still remains unknown, and whether the story is more than a mere footnote, however culturally significant, in the history of the Holocaust.

Continues here...


Varian Fry et le Centre américain de secours par Pierre Sauvage (in French)

On Mary Jayne Gold, with excerpts from her published memoir Crossroads Marseille 1940,
which chronicles her participation in the rescue effort

Americans Who Cared and why we should care about them

Tribute to Miriam Davenport Ebel,
Varian Fry's close aide who died September 13, 1999, at the age of 84
An Unsentimental Education, Miriam Davenport Ebel's memoir of 1940

The Indomitable Lisa Fittko (1909-2005)

A Hero Of Our Own: The Story of Varian Fry, a biography (2001) by Sheila Isenberg

A Quiet American: The Secret War of Varian Fry, a biography (1999) by Andy Marino
Interview with Andy Marino

Oh You Must Not Peek Under My Sunbonnet,
the first peek at Mary Jayne Gold's delightful, still unpublished memoir of her early years

Some of the 2,000 people helped...

Officers of the Emergency Rescue Committee

Crossroads Marseillethe movie project

Varian's War, 2001 Showtime movie, which purported to be about Varian Fry


The following need to be updated...

Chambon Foundation presentations

Other Varian Fry-Related Resources and Internet Links

Varian Fry Exhibit

Internet Links on righteous Gentiles

America and the Holocaust—a few recommendations

Varian Fry Photo Gallery (pending)

On-line video clips (pending)


Reward!  (Gratitude.)  If you knew Leon ("Dick"?) Ball,

a tough-talking lard salesman in France in the '30s who joined in the rescue effort
and may have served later in the French Resistance, please let us know!


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