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Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain

ByRabbi Dr Jonathan Romain, Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain

Opinion

Nicholas Winton was a hero, and my shul took care of his garden

I have special memories of the modest, inspiring man who saved 669 children from the Nazis

December 28, 2023 10:58
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Sir Nicholas Winton (Photo by Graeme Robertson/Getty Images).
3 min read

The much anticipated film about Sir Nicholas Winton, One Life, opens on 5 January. It will reveal to the public at large what most British Jews already know: how he saved 669 children, predominantly Jewish, spiriting them out of Prague in the days before World War Two broke out and the doors of freedom slammed shut.

The fact that stars such as Anthony Hopkins as Winton, Helena Bonham Carter as his mother and Jonathan Pryce as his co-worker have taken lead roles shows both the high aspirations the producers have and how much the actors themselves value the story. But what is perhaps most notable about the rescue missions is that they were so nearly obliterated from all memory. Once the borders were closed and no further children could be got out, that was the end of the matter. Winton — as well as everyone else — was totally taken up with the war. In his case, as a pacifist, he served with the Red Cross, before changing his views and joining the RAF.

After 1945 there was a rush to return to normal life, which for Winton meant taking up a job in finance. He never spoke publicly of the rescues he organised, nor pursued what happened to the children he saved. It was only when his wife was clearing out boxes in the attic almost five decades later, and uncovered papers relating to that period, that the full story began to emerge.

This led to the famous television moment when he was invited to a production of Dame Esther Rantzen’s That’s Life in 1988 in which, unbeknown to Winton, everyone else in the audience was a now adult survivor from his trains.