Varian Fry - Varian Fry: America’s Quiet Rescuer
Journalist
Born: October 15, 1907, in Harlem, New York City, U.S.A
Died: September 13, 1967, Redding, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Varian Fry was a courageous journalist who risked his life to rescue more than 2,000 people from Nazi-occupied France.
Born on October 15, 1907, in New York City, Fry grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey, where his family moved when he was young. As a boy, he loved reading, nature, and birdwatching, once even nursing an injured cedar waxwing back to health. He was curious and intelligent, quickly learning languages and excelling in school. By the time he graduated from Riverdale Country School in 1926, he could read and write in six languages and earned top marks on the Harvard entrance exams.
At Harvard, Fry studied classics, but his path soon led him to journalism. In 1935, while reporting from Berlin, he witnessed a brutal anti-Jewish riot. He saw people beaten and bloodied while police stood by, doing nothing to protect them. The violence left a lasting mark on him. Fry later said he could never forget that moment, and it helped shape his determination to fight against Nazi cruelty.
When Germany invaded France in 1940, thousands of refugees, many of them Jews, writers, artists, and intellectuals, were trapped in the unoccupied southern zone, governed by Vichy France. These refugees were at risk of being handed over to the Nazis. To help, a private American group, the Emergency Rescue Committee, created a plan to bring about 200 people to safety. Thirty-two-year-old Varian Fry volunteered to carry out the mission. In August 1940, he arrived in Marseilles with $3,000 in cash and a list of names.
It didn’t take long for Fry to realize the crisis was far larger than expected. Word of his arrival spread quickly, and soon hundreds of desperate refugees lined up outside his hotel. Many begged for his help, knowing that their lives depended on escape. The American consulate refused to assist him, and French officials were often hostile. Fry understood that if he followed the rules, most of the refugees would be lost. So he began building a secret network of helpers, American expatriates, French citizens, and even refugees themselves, who were willing to take risks to save others.
They formed the American Rescue Center (Centre Américain de Secours) in Marseilles, where they interviewed as many as 70 people a day. When legal visas ran out, Fry’s group turned to illegal methods. Forged documents, smuggling routes over the Pyrenees mountains, disguises, and hidden compartments in cars and ships were all used to get people out. One Viennese cartoonist even forged passports and stamps with extraordinary skill. Fry admitted the work was dangerous, saying: “I stayed because the refugees needed me. But it took courage, and courage is a quality that I hadn’t previously been sure I possessed.”
In just over a year, Fry and his team helped around 2,000 people escape, including famous figures such as painter Marc Chagall, writer Hannah Arendt, sculptor Jacques Lipchitz, and poet André Breton. Many of these refugees went on to make lasting contributions to art, literature, and philosophy in the United States and beyond.
Fry’s daring work, however, drew unwanted attention. French police raided his offices, arrested him, and even held him briefly on a prison ship. The U.S. government, focused on strict immigration policies, refused to support him. Finally, in August 1941, the French authorities, with pressure from the American Embassy, expelled him. As he boarded the train out of France, Fry thought of “the faces of the thousand refugees I had sent out of France, and the faces of a thousand more I had had to leave behind.”
Back in the United States, Fry struggled to find recognition. He was watched by the FBI, distanced by former colleagues, and spent much of the rest of his life teaching Latin at a boys’ school. He died in 1967 at the age of 59, largely forgotten.
But history did not forget him. In 1994, Fry became the first American named “Righteous Among the Nations” by Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial, a title given to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. In 2000, the square outside the U.S. Consulate in Marseilles was renamed “Place Varian Fry.” Today, Fry is remembered as a man who risked everything to save strangers, guided by courage, compassion, and an unshakable sense of justice.
References:
Varian Fry Emergency Escape, exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust/personal-story/varian-fry.
“Varian Fry, Holocaust Hero (1907-1967).” Varian Fry, Holocaust Hero (1907-1967) - Local History Department, localhistory.ridgewoodlibrary.org/ridgewood-history/hc-fry.
“Varian Fry.”, The Righteous Among the Nations, www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/fry.html.
“Varian Fry.” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/varian-fry.
Keywords:
Arts, Justice, Courage, Perseverance, Freedom, Responsibility, Make a Difference, Take Risks for Others
- Collections: Defender: Courage, Holocaust Unsung Heroes, Unsung Heroes, Wartime Unsung Heroes