PARSIPPANY — On Sunday, August 11, Mayor James R. Barberio, along with the Parsippany Interfaith Council, commemorated the courageous actions of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who heroically saved thousands of Hungarian Jews during the Holocaust. Wallenberg is remembered as a significant figure in World War II history. As a Swedish diplomat in Budapest, he is credited with rescuing tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the horrors of the Holocaust.
“Courage and Compassion: Remembering Raoul Wallenberg,” an annual program held every August at the sculpture erected in his honor, highlights Wallenberg’s remarkable bravery and humanitarian legacy, inspiring efforts toward tolerance and peace. The event is co-sponsored by Adath Shalom Synagogue, the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills, the Parsippany Interfaith Council, and the Morris County Human Relations Commission.
Raoul Wallenberg was a Swedish diplomat who became one of the most significant and heroic figures during World War II due to his extraordinary efforts to save Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust. Born on August 4, 1912, in Lidingö, Sweden, Wallenberg came from a prominent family influential in business, diplomacy, and banking.
“Today, we pay tribute to Raoul Wallenberg, a remarkable humanitarian who saved thousands of Hungarian Jewish people’s lives during the Holocaust,” said Mayor Barberio. “It is up to all of us that today not only be an act of remembrance that one person with integrity, commitment, and courage can make a difference even in the darkest of times, but a powerful reminder that we must stand up against antisemitism, hatred, and intolerance. Let us all reflect on the actions of this hero of humanity, as well as the millions of victims, survivors, and families who suffered because of the Holocaust.”
In 1944, during the height of World War II, Wallenberg was appointed as a diplomat to the Swedish Legation in Budapest, Hungary. His mission was to save as many Jews as possible from the Nazi extermination camps. Wallenberg employed a combination of diplomatic finesse, bribery, and deception to achieve this goal.
Wallenberg’s courageous acts included the use of “Schutz-Passes” – protective documents that claimed the bearers were under Swedish protection, despite these documents not having any legal authority. Additionally, he established safe houses throughout Budapest, marked as Swedish territory, where Jews could find refuge from Nazi and Arrow Cross raids. His tireless efforts exemplified an extraordinary sense of humanity during one of the darkest periods in history.
In 1945, Wallenberg was detained by Soviet forces for reasons that remain unclear, and his fate afterward is still surrounded by mystery, with varying accounts of his death.
Despite this, Wallenberg’s legacy is a powerful example of how one individual’s determination can combat profound evil.
“Today we gather to honor the extraordinary heroism of Raoul Wallenberg, who bravely saved tens of thousands of Jews during the Holocaust. At minimum, his bold efforts in the face of the overwhelming Nazi juggernaut and the Third Reich’s army of collaborators are a monument to the power that individual action can have against the greatest of evils,” said Commissioner Smith.
But noting the current rise in antisemitism, the murders of 1,200 people in Israel by Hamas terrorists on October 7, and the open support some in the United States continue to show for Hamas, Smith questioned whether history is repeating itself.