August
8, 2007
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM
-- Israel's Holocaust museum on Wednesday
posthumously honored a Romanian reserves officer
who blocked the deportation of Romanian Jews to
Nazi death camps.
Theodor
Criveanu was inducted into Yad Vashem's
"Righteous Among the Nations" group of non-Jews
who rescued Jews from the Nazis. His son, Willie
Criveanu, accepted the award on his behalf.
Six
million European Jews were killed by German
Nazis and their collaborators during World War
II.
The
20,000 Jews of Czernowitz, Romania, were
interned during the war and slated for
deportation to death camps.
As
a reserves officer in the Romanian army,
Criveanu was assigned the task of presenting
authorities a list of Jews who were required to
work in the ghetto, and were thus spared
deportation. According to testimonies given to
Yad Vashem, Criveanu risked his own life by
handing out permits beyond the allowed limit,
including to Jews who were not essential to the
work force. Yad Vashem said it could not
estimate how many Jews he saved.
Criveanu
married the daughter of one of the Jews he
saved. He died in Romania in 1988.
"My
father's life was based on justness,
correctness. He was a great humanitarian, that
was his nature," his son said at the ceremony.
"He was a gift from God for my mother's family
and to so many more."
More
than 21,000 non-Jews have been honored by Yad
Vashem, including Oskar Schindler, whose efforts
to save more than 1,000 Jews was documented in
the Oscar-award-winning film "Schindler's List."
Of these, 53 Romanians have been honored.
.