
Despite our Bill of Rights, growing list of amendments and civil protections, how many moments of the day do we find ourselves wanting something more, or something different? Not able to capture the happiness we pursue?
How does
true freedom look?
Clear sight plus compassion equals freedom, the freedom to act with courage upon what really matters.
Nicholas Winton was a man who put skin on those somewhat nebulous and high-minded ideals. was a successful stockbroker living the good life. Like many others around the world, in 1938 he read in the newspaper about Nazis persecution of Jews.
After the Munich agreement, when the Nazi’s marched into Czechoslovakia, Nicholas read about the thousands of families fleeing to Prague in hopes of escaping.
The children were especially vulnerable. “I went out into the camps where the people had been put who had been displaced and it was winter and it was cold.” Nicholas Winton rented a hotel room and started figuring out a way to get the children out.
But nobody
wanted them.
Winton tried to get the Americans to take some of the children, but our doors were closed. An embassy letter told him, “…United States Government is unable…” to help.
Finally, the British said the kids could come to England if families would agree to take them in. While the travel documents stalled in government bureaucracy...
prisoners at Dachau were forced to build a large complex of buildings to upgrade the concentration camp in preparation for large numbers of prisoners.
Nicholas Winton's small volunteer organization started to forge documents, bribe and blackmail. His motto: “If something’s not impossible, there must be a way of doing it.”
A train carried away the first 20 children the day before Nazi’s marched into Prague and Adolf Hilter stood in an open vehicle touring the city and waving to the crowds. Nicholas kept at it.
Over six-hundred children on seven trains journeyed across Nazi Germany to Holland, where they caught a ferry to England. Nicholas had an eighth train loaded with 250 children and scheduled to leave September 8th when the war in Europe started.
About 88,000 Czech Jews were deported to Auschwitz and other extermination camps. In 1945, some 15,000 children were found living in the children's home inside Auschwitz, only 93 of those children survived.
He kept silent
for fifty years
But listen to this.
Nicholas explained he never talked much about what he did in 1938 because "...there's too much emphasis on the past...nobody is concentrating on the present and the future."
To fully concentrate on the present and the future, we must find our way to freedom, true freedom. Add your two cents below...