Rabbi Eliezer Silver saved many from the Holocaust

By Rabbi Michael Leo Samuel

Rabbi Dr. Michael Leo Samuel
Rabbi Eliezer Silver
(Photo: Wikipedia)

CHULA VISTA, California — Rabbi Eliezer Silver (1882-1968) proved to be one of the greatest rescuers of European Jewry during the Holocaust. He is credited with saving many thousands of Jewish lives.

Rabbi Silver was a short man, barely five feet tall. He used to wear a large top hat to make himself seem taller. But in real life, he stood tall like a colossus.

Early on in 1939, Silver was one of the founding fathers of the Vaad Hatzalah (Rescue Committee), where Silver was appointed as its president. He was instrumental in rescuing the cream of European rabbinic leaders. Along with Rabbis Aaron Kotler and Abraham Kalmanowitz, Rabbi Silver marched up Pennsylvanian Avenue on October 6, 1943.

While standing in front of the White House, the large Jewish entourage of over two hundred rabbis recited the Psalms and announced, “We pray and appeal to the Lord, blessed be He, that our most gracious President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, recognizing this momentous hour of history and responsibility that the Divine Presence has laid upon him, that he may save the remnant of the People of the Book, the People of Israel.”

Shortly afterward, the Jewish delegation met with Vice President Henry Wallace and a congressional delegation to make their case for European Jewry. Later, at the Lincoln Memorial, a special memorial prayer was said on behalf of the martyred Jews. Finally, the five rabbis went to the White House to meet with the President, where the President made his famous backdoor exit rather than meeting with them. Although they did not meet with the President, the publicity of the march led to the eventual formulation of the War Refugees Board that opened the doorway to over 100,000 Jews. When one considers how many of these survivors went on to have children–not to mention grandchildren–Rabbi Silver really saved millions of lives!

After the event, Rabbi Silver succeeded in raising over $5 million for the new immigrants and secured over 2,000 emergency visas for the Jewish refugees. Like Rabbi Michael Weissmandl, Rabbi Eliezer Silver utilized every means available to bribe officials in Europe and in Latin America, to help settle Jews in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Palestine. Foreign diplomats provided the fake visas to help facilitate the rescue. He even attempted to trade concentration camp prisoners for cash and tractors, resulting in the release of hundreds of Jews from the Bergen Belsen concentration camps along with several others.

Rabbi Silver, driven by the biblical admonition against standing idly by a brother’s blood, made no apologies for violating the Trading with the Enemy Act. In one of his most famous letters, he writes:

“We are ready to pay ransom for Jews and deliver them from concentration camps with the help of forged passports. We are prepared to violate many laws in order to save lives. We do not hesitate to deal with counterfeiters and passport thieves. We are ready to smuggle Jewish children over the borders, and to engage expert smugglers for this purpose, rogues whose profession this is. We are ready to smuggle money illegally into enemy territory in order to bribe those dregs of humanity, the killers of the Jewish people!”

Even after the war was over, Rabbi Silver continued to help bring over refugees from more than eight European nations. In the end, he died penniless after using all of his monies to help pave the way for Jewish immigration to the United States and Israel, including those who were trying to flee from Communism.

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Rabbi Michael Leo Samuel is spiritual leader of Temple Beth Shalom in Chula Vista, California. He may be contacted via michael.samuel@sdjewishworld.com

1 thought on “Rabbi Eliezer Silver saved many from the Holocaust”

  1. Guy &Susan D’Arco

    Dear Rabbi Samuel.

    My wife Susan and I are an interfaith couple who have been married for over 36 years. My name is Guy D’Arco, and I grew up in the Bronx off the Grand Concourse, which was a heavily populated Jewish neighborhood as you probably well know. I mentioned this because the area was beautiful even though the area was charging in the 1960s. But I met my wife in 1981 working at a nursing home very close to yankee stadium that was a kosher facility. She was raised reformed and she opened my world to the Jewish culture and religion like no one else.

    In my town in New Jersey, there are many transplanted New Yorkers of many faiths but especially Jewish and Italians. We could not have a normal Passover because of the covid19 situation. But a very nice rabbi in a neighboring town offered Passover kits on Facebook. It was a truly wonderful experience and in the box were 3 candles to light but we forgot. And yesterday my wife heard that today is holocaust remberance day in Israel. And I found you article this morning and enjoyed the remarkable story of rabbi silver’s heroics.

    In closing it is very important to never forget the past as it teaches and strengthens us to not make the same mistakes again.

    Take care and be safe. We will overcome this virus as long as we remain positive and follow common sense.

    Sincerely,

    Guy & Susan D’Arco

    Manalapan, New Jersey

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