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  • Legacy of Scot Murdered By The Nazis

    Glasgow Daily Record, Scotland, UK
    Oct 20 2007


    Legacy of Scot Murdered By The Nazis
    Oct 20 2007 By Annie Brown



    Exclusive Jane Haining's School Continues To Reach Out To Those
    Children Most In Need

    SHE was one of Scotland's most courageous women and Jane Haining left
    behind a legacy that lives on across the globe.

    The Scots missionary was murdered by the Nazis, but her compassion
    had a profound impact on the Jewish children she protected from
    fascism. Long after her death in Auschwitz, she inspired one of the
    most important human rights drives in US Government history.

    Her former pupil Annette Lantos formed the Congressional Human Rights
    Caucus and she placed at its heart the principles of her teacher.

    The Nazis killed Jane on August 16, 1944 and she became the only Scot
    to die in Auschwitz. But the spirit of the Scottish Missionary School
    she ran in Budapest will never die.

    Jane's school became a sanctuary for Jewish girls like Annette as the
    spectre of fascism loomed.

    Annette is in no doubt that the three years she spent at the school
    shaped the woman she was to become.

    She said: "To go there where we were all accepted and treated with
    respect changed our attitude at an age when that was fundamental and
    important.

    "I owe Jane Haining and her Scottish school so much. My childhood was
    lived under the shadow of a terrible war and she gave me the best
    experience. That wonderful Scottish school gave me my happiest
    memories of those years."

    Annette, the first cousin of movie star Zsa Zsa Gabor, is married to
    US congressman Tom Lantos, the sole member of the House who survived
    the Holocaust during World War Two.

    Democrat Lantos chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, who are
    currently at the centre of an international row after it passed a
    bill officially labelling the killings of Armenians by Turkish forces
    in 1915, "genocide."

    The bill, opposed by President Bush, could spark a backlash from
    Turkey, which is used as a staging area and transport route for
    supplies that are sent to Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Annette and Tom have been married 57 years and have worked together
    for more than 20.

    Annette is Executive Director of the Human Rights Caucus, one of the
    most influential caucuses in Congress.

    Tom Lantos discussed the Armenian issue extensively with his wife who
    travels the globe with him.

    He describes them "like a bicycle built for two" and tongue slightly
    in cheek, maintains: "She leads, I merely follow."

    He also said: "My wife's passionate commitment to human rights stems
    from the values she absorbed in that wonderful Scottish school.

    "I can see in my wife's life what an enduring and profoundly humane
    education she received."

    The Armenian issue, he said, was "one example of standing up for the
    right thing even when it is not popular".

    Jane Haining died for that same principle. She born in Dunscone near
    Dumfries in 1897. She worked for 10 years in a thread maker's in
    Paisley, but at ameeting in Glasgow about the Jewish Mission, she
    knew instantly: "I have found my life-work."

    She was sent to the Church of Scotland mission to the Jews in
    Budapest in 1932 and became head of its girls' school.

    Asthe war rumbled on, the majority of girls who went there were
    Jewish, some orphaned and destitute, while others, like wealthy
    jeweller's daughter Annette, were sent there to be educated.

    In the 1920s, Hungary became the first country in Europe to place a
    quota on the number of Jewish pupils at its schools and even those
    given a place were treated with contempt.

    Of approximately 825,000 Jews living in Hungary in 1941, about 63,000
    died or were killed prior to the German occupation of March 1944.

    But Jane swam against the tide of hatred and in her school, each girl
    was as precious as the next.

    Annette said: "In other schools people who were Jewish were not
    allowed to mix.

    I spent a year in a Lutheran school and felt very excluded from the
    social life.

    Even the teachers made a distinction.

    "But in the Scottish school there was a sense of acceptance. It was
    democratic and so egalitarian. There was no snobbery or cliques. The
    priority was education.

    "It enabled us to shed the great resentment we felt against all
    authority, living in this oppressive regime where we met so much
    discrimination."

    It was not easy for Jewish families to send their children to a
    Christian school but though they sang hymns and read the bible, it
    was no longer Jane's priority to convert them.

    Instead she created a sanctuary and within its walls the girls found
    love, kindness and above all, normality.

    Annette was there for three and a half years from the age of 10.

    "We all felt that those were the best years of our young lives," she
    said. "Jane Haining created a little haven for us.

    "The classroom was friendly. Most of the teachers were Hungarian but
    the principles were Scottish and the framework under which the
    teachers operated was Scottish."

    By March 1944, the Germans were on Hungary's doorstep.

    Annette's was first cousin of the Gabor sisters and her father
    Sebastian Tilemann had the largest jewellers in Budapest, placing
    them on the Nazis top 10 wanted list.

    On March 18th Annette fled with her mother Mary to the Portuguese
    embassy and then to Switzerland.

    JANE remained at the school despite requests from the church that she
    return to Scotland for her own safety.

    She told them: "If these children need me in days of sunshine, how
    much more do they need me in days of darkness?"

    But the darkness of the Nazis invaded her school. They ordered Jane
    to sew yellow Stars of David to the clothes of the little girls in
    her care. Tears streamed down her face with every stitch.

    She incurred further wrath when she disciplined the son-in-law of the
    school cook, who was a member of the Nazi party, for eating the
    girls' food.

    In May she was arrested by the Gestapo, taken to Fo-utca prison,
    where she was charged with working among Jews. Within two weeks she
    was transported to Auschwitz with the children who had been in her
    care.

    She was prisoner 79467 and one of the 12,000 a day who were gassed in
    the death chambers. She was only 47.

    It was not until the Eighties at a reunion of alumni that Annette
    discovered Jane's fate.

    She said: "I was deeply moved. I wasn't surprised that she acted that
    way. She was a woman of deep conscience and commitment to her values
    and to the children in her care.

    "I don't think she could understand the extent of the inhumanity and
    cruelty."

    Annette is now 76, she has two daughters, 18 grandchildren and two
    great-grandchildren. She lost her father, her grandparents and most
    of her close relatives in the Holocaust.

    In 1997, Israel awarded Jane a medal and her place with The Righteous
    Among the Nations - the same honour given to Schindler. Her name is
    inscribed at Yad Vashem alongside his.

    Last year Annette successfully fought to have the school kept open
    after it was threatened with closure. It is now a school for disabled
    children run by the Hungarian Government.

    Annette said: "It is a wonderful place that carries on the legacy of
    the Scottish school. There is a spirit that remains."

    When Annette organised the caucus in 1983, human rights was still
    considered a "flaky issue" in congress.

    "It was not considered a serious issue so it was difficult to
    convince members to join," she said.

    The Human Rights Caucus is active in highlighting abuses in countries
    such as Sudan and China.

    In 1987, Annette was instrumental in getting the Dalai Lama to visit
    the US and in the Nineties, she travelled to Budapest for a memorial
    service for Jane and laid a wreath at the school.

    Annette said: "It is important that we not only remember the
    atrocities, violence, murder and terror of that time, but that we
    also consider the sparks of humanity that glowed in the midst of the
    darkest of nights."

    'If these children need me in days of sunshine, how much more do they
    need me in days of darkness?'

    http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/lifestyle /real-life-stories/2007/10/20/legacy-of-scot-murde red-by-the-nazis-86908-19980979/
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