A Bordeaux, une lumière sur le consul Sousa Mendes, un “Schindler” méconnu

A Bordeaux, une lumière sur le consul Sousa Mendes, un “Schindler” méconnu

Published on : Modified :

Bordeaux (AFP) – If “Schindler’s List” is known worldwide, the sacrifice of Aristides de Sousa Mendes is much less so: Bordeaux is devoting an exhibition to its Portuguese consul, the “forgotten” hero of June 1940, who saved thousands of refugees from the war by distributing precious visas.

“A consul in resistance” (until October 2 at the Aquitaine museum), retraces the “act of courage” of a senior civil servant, a “fervent Catholic” for whom “the values ​​of morality were stronger than the orders”, summarizes Laurent Védrine, chief curator of the museum.

In June 1940, despite the instructions of the dictator Antonio Oliveira Salazar, who prohibited the entry of Portugal to “Jews”, foreigners without “satisfactory” reason and to “stateless persons”, he had distributed visas to refugees, of any nationality or religion, thus saving more than 30,000 people, including 10,000 Jews.

A disobedience that earned him the banishment of Portuguese society.

The exhibition “A consul in resistance” at the Aquitaine museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux Thibaud MORITZAFP

Dismissed from his post after a disciplinary trial, he died in 1954 in poverty in a hospital in Lisbon at the age of 69. “He died alone, and he died above all in oblivion”, underlines Mr. Védrine.

Sometimes compared to the German industrialist Oskar Schindler, who snatched hundreds of Jews from deportation, Mr. Sousa Mendes is experiencing a belated rehabilitation.

He was recognized in 1966 as “righteous among the nations” by the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem.

Then in Portugal, 20 years later, he was decorated with the Cross of Merit before entering the National Pantheon in October 2021.

the invasion of Ukraine gives new resonance to the journey of the rebel consul, “a universal model” because “there are still refugees fleeing war, and brave men and women who help them at their peril “, underlines his grandson Gérald Mendes, who lives in Montpellier.

The exhibition "A consul in resistance" at the Aquitaine Museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux
The exhibition “A consul in resistance” at the Aquitaine museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux Thibaud MORITZAFP

“This exhibition bridges the gap between past and present, it questions us about the reception of refugees and these notions of disobedience and civic action”, adds Laurent Védrine.

“Race against time”

Thanks to several documentary funds, the museum retraces these crucial weeks in Bordeaux after the invasion of Belgium, the Netherlands and the North of France by Germany, on May 10, 1940.

While 4 million people throw themselves on the roads of exile, thousands seek to flee wealthy Europe to Bordeaux where the French government responds on June 14.

The exhibition "A consul in resistance" at the Aquitaine Museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux
The exhibition “A consul in resistance” at the Aquitaine museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux Thibaud MORITZAFP

Chaos and then his meeting with Rabbi Kruger, who had left Poland, swayed Sousa Mendes. “Torn between the duty of obedience and that of humanity, he will lock himself up for three days before making the decision to disobey”, relates Laurent Védrine.

At the entrance to the exhibition, the “Candelabra”, a metallic video-sculpture in the form of a chandelier, symbolizes this inner dilemma.

On the work, designed by the artist Werner Klotz on an idea of ​​Sébastien Michael Mendes, grandson of the consul, screens scroll through images that may have tormented the consul, father of 15 children – his family, his career, the refugees – while a soundtrack sings out the surnames that got the sesame.

“At the end, he signs them on a corner of the table on the street in Bayonne, it’s a race against time”, recalls the chief curator.

Between period newspapers and images of the Pont de Pierre over the Garonne invaded by a human tide, objects lent by the Sousa Mendes Foundation immerse the visitor in these bribes: the teddy bears of a Dutch refugee, passports stamped by the consul, yellow stars…

Like other descendants of visa beneficiaries, scattered around the world, Jennifer Hartog learned of Sousa Mendes’ action only late in 2013, thanks to the foundation’s identification work.

The exhibition "A consul in resistance" at the Aquitaine Museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux
The exhibition “A consul in resistance” at the Aquitaine museum, June 21, 2022 in Bordeaux Thibaud MORITZAFP

“They didn’t know that Sousa Mendes was doing an act of courage by putting on a tampon,” said a moved Canadian whose family was fleeing the Netherlands.

His cousin from Jerusalem Beatrice Brom tried to find out about his mother’s journey. But “she simply said: + We were lucky +”.


Posted

in

by

Tags: