[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 297 Introduced in House (IH)]
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117th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 297
Honoring the life and legacy of Carl Lutz.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 8, 2021
Mr. Luetkemeyer (for himself and Mr. McGovern) submitted the following
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Honoring the life and legacy of Carl Lutz.
Whereas Carl Lutz was born on March 30, 1895, in Walzenhausen, Switzerland, but
moved to the United States as a young man;
Whereas Carl Lutz became a diplomat, eventually serving at the Swiss consulate
in what was then Mandatory Palestine;
Whereas, in 1942, Carl Lutz was transferred to Budapest, Hungary, where he--
(1) served as the Swiss vice consul until the end of World War II; and
(2) represented countries that had severed diplomatic relations with
Hungary because of its German alliance;
Whereas Carl Lutz, upon arrival in Budapest, began to work to help Jews receive
Swiss diplomatic protection so they could flee Nazi persecution;
Whereas, in 1944, Carl Lutz received permission to issue protective papers to
save 8,000 Jews from deportation, which Lutz determined to mean 8,000
families, not 8,000 individuals;
Whereas Carl Lutz extended Swiss protection to 76 buildings that operated as
safe houses for Jewish refugees seeking protection, including a
department store called the Glass House, which served as a refuge for up
to 3,000 Jews and as a headquarters for the Zionist underground;
Whereas, in November 1944, Carl Lutz and his wife, Trudi Lutz, joined a death
march to various concentration camps, pulling Jews out of the line to
issue as many protective papers as possible;
Whereas, at the end of World War II, Carl Lutz and his coconspirators, including
his wife, his staff, and the Zionist underground members, saved over
50,000 Jews, which was half of the surviving Jewish population of
Budapest; and
Whereas the United States is deeply indebted to Carl Lutz, who was responsible
for the largest civilian rescue mission of Jews during World War II:
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) honors the life and legacy of Carl Lutz;
(2) recognizes that the heroic effort of Carl Lutz went
above and beyond the call of duty to save the Hungarian Jews
``condemned to die'' because he believed it to be a ``matter of
conscience''; and
(3) expresses deep appreciation to Carl Lutz on behalf of
the United States for facilitating the largest civilian rescue
mission of Jews during World War II, saving over 50,000 Jews
through the protective papers and documentation he issued.
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