Incredible story
from Canada. Judith Weiszmann, a Second World War survivor, encountered
her own face on a stamp honoring Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish man
whose efforts saved tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from falling
into the hands of Nazi Germany. Go read:
Look on the top left |
Ms.Weiszmann
rushed out to buy a couple booklets, tossed them in her purse, pulled
them out later to take a closer look and practically fainted. The stamp
features Mr. Wallenberg and a shutz pass, and not just any shutz pass,
but one belonging to Judith Kopstein — age 14 in 1944 and age 83 now —
and, more importantly, Ann Weiszmann’s mother.
“I couldn’t believe it,” she says. Neither
could her mother, Judith, a retired structural engineer, Winnipeg
resident and transplanted Hungarian Jew whose shutz pass — with picture
included — is now immortalized on a stamp honouring a man she regards as
the “greatest man” of the 20th century.
“It is just incredible that something like
this would happen,” Judith Weiszmann says. “Wallenberg was fearless. He
saved people’s lives by risking his own and having a stamp of him —
that is very natural — but having my picture on it, that is something
completely unexpected.”
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