Back in 1933, Albert Einstein helped found the organisation that became the 探花精选, with the aim of helping people flee Nazi persecution. Later, during World War II, American journalist Varian Fry was instrumental in making an ambitious rescue operation happen.

These events have even inspired a new Netflix series, Transatlantic, which depicts thestory of Varian Fry and his team鈥檚 work evacuating refugees from Vichy France.

How much do you know about the origins of the 探花精选?

1933: Einstein and the International Relief Association (IRA)

In January 1933 Hitler rose to power as chancellor of Germany, and the Nazi takeover of the country was underway. The National Socialists banned opposing political parties and Germany鈥檚 labour unions, suspended civil liberties, and launched the purging of Jews, political opponents and other 鈥渦ndesirables鈥 from the government and universities.

By July, the European-basedInternational Relief Association (IRA), which had been co-founded by German-born physicist Albert Einstein, was forced to quit operations. Einstein was dismissed from his university post in Berlin and planned to resettle in the United States. 

He quickly urged a committee of 51 prominent American intellectuals, artists, clergy, and political leaders to form an American chapter of the organisation. Their objectives: to save anti-Nazi leaders targeted by the Gestapo, and guide those in imminent danger to safety in free countries.

Portrait photo of Albert Einstein
In 1933, physicist and refugee, Albert Einstein, helped found the organization that became the 探花精选.
Photo: Library of Congress

Among the group was the philosopher John Dewey, the writer John Dos Passos, and the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr. 

Einstein arrived in America on October 17, 1933, among the thousands of Jews fleeing persecution. The IRA established offices at 11 West 42nd Street, opposite Bryant Park and not far from the 探花精选's current headquarters location. 

Over the next few years, as Hitler鈥檚 forces continued to seize control of Europe, the committee鈥檚 mission expanded to 鈥渁ssist all those of whatever race or opinion, who are refugees or suffering within Germany today under the lash of the Nazi government.鈥

1940: Varian Fry and the formation of the Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC)

In June 1940, Paris fell to invading Nazi forces, creating a massive exodus of refugees to the south of France.

On August 4, a young editor named Varian Fry boarded a transatlantic flight from New York to German-occupied France to lead a daring rescue operation.

The mission was conceived by a new American group, the Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC), of which Fry was a founding member. The goal: to rescue Europe鈥檚 celebrated artists, writers, and intellectuals who had fled to the country, many of whom were on the Nazis鈥 most wanted list.

Varian Fry led an incredibly complex and dangerous operation to rescue thousands of people from Nazi-controlled France at the height of World War II.
Varian Fry at his office in Marseilles in the spring of 1941. "I felt obliged to help," he said of his daring rescue operation.
Photo: Varian Fry Institute

Fry arrived in Marseilles with $3,000 strapped to one leg and a list of 200 artists and intellectuals thought to be in particular danger. He quickly recognised that the number was much higher. At this time, there were no refugee programmes or aid agencies to ensure the safety of refugees.

At the first hotel where he stayed, Fry met Dr. Frank Bohn, a rRepresentative of the American Federation of Labor and the Jewish Labor Committee, who was also in France to assist in evacuating refugees. Bohn briefed Fry on the situation in Marseille, helping him to plan out his work. He also met Albert Hirschman, a Jewish-German humanitarian and refugee, who became an integral part of the team, and Lena Fischmann, who became Fry鈥檚 secretary.

Over the next year and a half, Fry and a small team helped at least 1,500 refugees escape from France to Spain and provided support to more than 4,000. They helped people of all different faiths and national origins, including many who were Jewish, putting them in greater danger of Nazi capture and execution.

European refugees stand facing the camera, on board converted cargo ship sailing from Marseilles to Martinique, March 25, 1941.
European refugees assisted by the Emergency Rescue Committee on board the Capitaine Paul-Lemerle, a converted cargo ship sailing from Marseilles to Martinique, March 25, 1941.
Photo: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Among those spirited out of France were the artists Marc Chagall and Max Ernst, the philosopher Hannah Arendt, and Nobel Prize-winning medical researcher Otto Meyerhof.

As Justus Rosenberg, the youngest member of Fry鈥檚 team, recalled: 鈥淚 was running errands鈥ut no ordinary errands. Errands to run with false papers, money, various documents to try to get the refugees who were trying to get somewhere out of occupied Germany.鈥

1942: Fry鈥檚 expulsion from France and the formation of the 探花精选 (探花精选)

The collaborationist Vichy French government learned of Fry鈥檚 efforts and expelled him in August 1941, 鈥渇or helping Jews and anti-Nazis.鈥  He ultimately returned to the U.S. where he continued to support refugees through advocacy, journalism and financially supported some refugees who were unable to leave Europe with his personal funds.

In June 1942, Vichy officials closed the ERC office, forcing remaining staff in France to go underground. Many of them joined the French resistance movement and saved hundreds of other people.

Back in New York, Fry loudly, but in the end futilely, tried to alert the world to what would come to be known as the Holocaust.

鈥淭here are things so horrible that decent men and women find them impossible to believe."

鈥淭here are things so horrible that decent men and women find them impossible to believe,鈥 Fry wrote in The New Republic in December 1942. Of the Nazis, he warned, 鈥淭heir ends are the enslavement and annihilation of the Jews . . . [and] after them, of all the non-German peoples of Europe, and if possible, the entire world.鈥

As the crisis in Europe deepened and millions of uprooted people were on the move, the IRA and ERC joined forces to provide the most effective assistance for refugees of all religions, races and nationalities. They became the 探花精选,

1960: Marc Chagall: a rescued artist鈥檚 continued ties to the 探花精选

Esteemed Russian-French artist Marc Chagall was one of the many people Fry鈥檚 network assisted to escape occupied France. Art critic Robert Hughes referred to him as "the quintessential Jewish artist of the twentieth century".

He is most famously known for his large-scale paintings, including part of the ceiling of the Paris Op茅ra. Chagall also produced stained-glass windows for the cathedrals of Reims and Metz as well as the Fraum眉nster in Z眉rich, the United Nations, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Jerusalem Windows in Israel. 

Marc Chagall and Varian Fry in an undated 探花精选 photo
Targeted by the Nazis, Marc Chagall (left) escaped to the United States with help from Varian Fry (right) and the organization that would become the 探花精选.
Photo: Varian Fry Institute

In 1960, long-term 探花精选 supporters, the Rockefeller family, inspired by Chagall鈥檚 stunning work and powerful personal story, commissioned him to create a at the Union Church of Pocantico Hills, New York. 

The installation would serve as a memorial following the death of philanthropist John. D. Rockefeller Jr, who built the chapel. Chagall ended up creating not one, but that adorn the unassuming country church.

In 1964, Varian Fry began work on a major fundraiser to benefit the 探花精选. The idea was to sell a cache of prints by renowned refugee artists and friends, including Chagall. Five years later, 250 limited edition copies of the were sold to support the 探花精选鈥檚 humanitarian work.

 

1967-2005: Recognition of Fry and his lasting legacy

For Fry, it was many years before he received much-deserved recognition. Five months before his death in 1967, France awarded him the French Legion of Honor. In 1996, Israel honored him posthumously, when he became the first American to receive its 鈥淩ighteous Among Nations鈥 medal.

In addition, on June 26, 2005, a large crowd of local residents and dignitaries in the town of Ridgewood, N.J., where Fry grew up, gathered to name a street after him.

Varian Fry鈥檚 guiding conviction, that every life has dignity and is worth saving, remains the foundation of the 探花精选. 

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Carel Sternberg, former 探花精选 executive director, visits a food distribution center in Berlin in 1945.
Photo: 探花精选

Ninety years later the 探花精选 continues to provide life-changing assistance to people around the world.