How We Present the News
WORLD NEWS
Positive Trends
Success Stories
Flops
Agriculture
Business
Culture
Education
Government
Health
Science
World Peace
News by
Country
Maharishi in the World Today
Excellence in Action
Consciousness Based Education
Ideal Society
Index
Invincible World
Action for
Achievement
Announcements
WATCH LIVE
Maharishi® Channel
Maharishi TV
Maharishi Darshan Hindi Press Conferences
Maharishi's Press Conferences and Great Global Events
ULTIMATE GIFTS
Maharishi's
Programmes
Maharishi's
Courses
Maharishi's
Publications
Scintillating
Intelligence
Worldwide Links
Transcendental
Meditation
RESEARCH
Album of Events
Celebration
Calendars
Musicmall ♬
Search
|
Czechs honor Winton for trains evacuating children
by Karel Janicek
The Associated Press Translate This Article
28 October 2014
PRAGUE (AP) - The president of the Czech Republic awarded a Briton his country's highest state honor for organizing a mass evacuation of children to save them from Nazi death camps.
Sir Nicholas Winton received the Order of the White Lion from President Milos Zeman at a ceremony Tuesday at Prague Castle. Accepting the award, the 105-year-old Winton said he was delighted to receive it.
'I want to thank you all for this tremendous expression of thanks for something which happened to me nearly 100 years ago,' Winton joked. 'And 100 years is a heck of a long time.'
Winton had arranged for eight trains to carry 669 children, most of them Jewish, from Czechoslovakia through Hitler's Germany to Britain in 1939 at the outbreak of World War II. The youngsters were sent to foster parents—mostly in England, a small number in Sweden.
Winton's story did not emerge until 1988, when his wife found correspondence referring to the prewar events. In 2002, British Prime Minister Tony Blair praised him as 'Britain's Schindler,' after the German businessman Oskar Schindler, who also saved Jewish lives during the war.
Zeman said he was ashamed that Winton had waited so long to get the honor but added: 'Better late than never.'
Winton was awarded another top Czech decoration, the Tomas Garrigue Masaryk Order, in 1998 by the late President Vaclav Havel.
Winton gave credit to the many foster parents who made the mission possible.
'I thank the British people for making room for them, to accept them and of course, the enormous help given by so many Czechs who were at that time doing what they could to fight the Germans and to try and get the children out,' Winton said.
The Czechs have repeatedly nominated Winton for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Copyright © 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Every day Global Good News documents the rise of a better quality of life dawning in the world from good news reported by the press; and highlights the need for introducing Natural Law based—Total Knowledge based—programmes to bring the support of Nature to every individual, raise the quality of life of every society, and create a lasting state of world peace.
Translation software is not perfect; however if you would like to try it, you can translate this page using:
Send Good News to Global Good News.
Your comments.
|
|