The NY Times reports on a remarkable woman to whom due recognition has now come, very late in the piece:
"Irena Sendler saved nearly 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis during World War II, organizing a ring of 20 helpers that smuggled them out of the Warsaw Ghetto in baskets and ambulances.
The Nazis arrested her, but she did not talk under torture. After she survived the war, she expressed regret — for doing too little.
Lawmakers in Poland's Senate disagreed Wednesday, unanimously passing a resolution honoring her and the Polish underground's Council for Assisting Jews.
The group's members, mostly Roman Catholics, risked their own lives to save Jews from the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland."
What needs to ask why it has taken so long for this obviously remarkable woman to be publicly recognised.
"Irena Sendler saved nearly 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis during World War II, organizing a ring of 20 helpers that smuggled them out of the Warsaw Ghetto in baskets and ambulances.
The Nazis arrested her, but she did not talk under torture. After she survived the war, she expressed regret — for doing too little.
Lawmakers in Poland's Senate disagreed Wednesday, unanimously passing a resolution honoring her and the Polish underground's Council for Assisting Jews.
The group's members, mostly Roman Catholics, risked their own lives to save Jews from the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland."
What needs to ask why it has taken so long for this obviously remarkable woman to be publicly recognised.
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