Become a Member
Opinion

Frank Foley was a beacon of light in the darkest period of history

Karen Pollock writes about the man who saved 10,000 Jews from certain death

September 20, 2018 08:17
MP Ian Austin (left) with the Duke of Cambridge after the unveiling of the statue of Frank Foley in Stourbridge.
1 min read

The heroic story of Frank Foley, the British Spy who saved 10,000 Jews from almost certain death, is a beacon of light within the darkest period of history.

A British spy stationed in Berlin, Foley used his cover as passport control officer to issue thousands of visas to German Jews desperate to escape Nazi persecution.

Foley went to remarkable lengths to save Jews, right under the nose of the Nazis, even visiting concentration camps to remove them. He bent and broke rules, risking both discovery by the Nazis and disciplinary action from his own superiors, in his determination to do what was right – and in the process inspired other British diplomats to follow suit.

Thanks to the efforts of Ian Austin MP and support from former Chancellor George Osborne, a statue of this great man was unveiled this week by His Royal Highness the Duke of Cambridge in Stourbridge, the town where Foley quietly spent the later years of his life, never speaking publicly about his heroic deeds which remained unknown until after his death.