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Last update - 00:00 22/07/2007

Yad Vashem given archive of Hungarian Jew accused of collaborating with Nazis

By The Associated Press

The Yad Vashem Holocaust museum on Sunday received the personal archives of a Hungarian Jew both praised and vilified for bargaining with the Nazis for the lives of Hungarian Jews during the Holocaust.

Israel (Rudolf) Kasztner was hailed by admirers as a Holocaust hero for saving thousands of Jews. But critics reviled him as a collaborator who sold his soul. In 1957, after a campaign of vilification, he was assassinated.

In a ceremony on Sunday, Yad Vashem received Kazstner's private archives, a step his family says is a step toward his exoneration.

Kasztner, a Zionist leader in Hungary during World War II, headed the Va'adat Ezrah Vehatzalah (Relief and Rescue Committee), and he negotiated with Nazi officials to rescue Hungarian Jews in exchange for money, goods and military equipment.

In June 1944, the Kasztner Train, with 1,684 Jews on board, departed Budapest for the safety of neutral Switzerland. Kasztner's negotiations also saved 20,000 Hungarian Jews by diverting them to an Austrian labor camp instead of a planned transfer to extermination camps, according to Yad Vashem.

Yad Vashem officials said the material released Sunday should finally put an end to what it said was an unjustified smear campaign against Kasztner.

"There was no man in the history of the Holocaust who saved more Jews, and was subjected to more injustice than Israel Kasztner," said former cabinet minister Yosef Lapid, chairman of Yad Vashem's board of directors and himself a Holocaust survivor from Hungary.

"This is an opportunity to do justice to a man who was misrepresented and was a victim on a vicious attack that led to his death," he said, calling Kasztner one of the great heroes of the Holocaust.

Kasztner's backers say his actions were similar to those of Oskar Schindler, a non-Jew whose efforts to save more than 1,000 Jews was documented in the Oscar-winning film Schindler's List.

But Kasztner's detractors accused him of colluding with the Nazis to spare a collection of his well-connected and wealthy Jewish friends, while hundreds of thousands of others were being shipped to death camps.

Kasztner moved to Israel after the war and became a top official in the ruling Labor Party. In 1954 a local writer, Malkiel Grunwald, issued a self-published pamphlet that accused Kasztner of being a Nazi collaborator.

The government in Jerusalem sued Grunwald for libel on Kasztner's behalf, resulting in a trial that lasted two years and riveted the nation.

In its verdict, the court acquitted Grunwald of libel and concluded that Kasztner "sold his soul to the German Satan."

Kasztner insisted all along that his dealings with top Nazi officials, including Kurt Becher, an envoy of SS commander Heinrich Himmler, and Adolf Eichmann, the Gestapo officer who organized the extermination of the Jews, were necessary to save lives.

Kasztner was demonized in the Israeli public and was murdered in 1957. A year later, the Supreme Court overturned the lower court's ruling in the libel case, clearing his name.

Sunday's ceremony was attended by Suzanne Kasztner, his only child, and by several people who survived because of the Kasztner Train.

Kasztner, 61, said the ceremony was another step in the rehabilitation of her father's name. "I also think that the state of Israel has finally retrieved some of its lost honor over this entire affair," she said.

Kasztner's private archives include three boxes of letters documenting his correspondence with family, Jewish organizations and Nazi officials.

Robert Rozett, director of the Yad Vashem library, said that while Kasztner's public legacy has remained in question, it has long been established among historians that he acted in good faith.

"This is a man who was engaged in rescue activities," he said. "Rescue activities during the Holocaust meant being in touch with people who would not particularly like to invite over to your house to have a cup of coffee."

Kasztner himself didn't board his famous train to freedom, instead staying behind and negotiating the further release of Jews, risking his own life.

Rozett said the findings in the archives support the idea that he was dealing in rescue and not behind-the-scenes deals to sell off Hungarian Jews.

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