When PH Was The Only Door Open To Fleeing Jews: Tarra Quismundo @tarrainq
When PH Was The Only Door Open To Fleeing Jews: Tarra Quismundo @tarrainq
When PH Was The Only Door Open To Fleeing Jews: Tarra Quismundo @tarrainq
The Nazis had robbed Lottie Hershfield of her childhood all too soon. She was just 7 years old
when Germany, her place of birth, no longer felt like home.
Adolf Hitler’s regime held Jews like Hershfield and her family in the same regard as animals; at the
park, benches carried signs that read “dogs and Jews not allowed.” The Nazis raided her family
home, and all the frightened child could do was to tightly clutch her doll as a fierce German
shepherd barked at her, as if ready to devour her.
The Nazis had robbed Lottie Hershfield of her childhood all too soon. She was just 7 years old when Germany,
her place of birth, no longer felt like home.
Adolf Hitler’s regime held Jews like Hershfield and her family in the same regard as animals; at the
park, benches carried signs that read “dogs and Jews not allowed.” The Nazis raided her family
home, and all the frightened child could do was to tightly clutch her doll as a fierce German
shepherd barked at her, as if ready to devour her.
Stateless and unwanted, Hershfield’s family and the Jewish community then learned that a country
in the Pacific was ready to accept those seeking refuge. It was in the Philippines, a place largely
unheard of, thousands of kilometers away from Europe, where she got her childhood back.
“When you saw how the doors were basically closed to all of us except the Philippines … the
Filipino people are a very warm people, they’re a very friendly people,” Hershfield said in a
preview of the documentary “An Open Door: Jewish Rescue in the Philippines.”
“We played sipa (kick). We learned Filipino songs, there were quite a few performances. Art was
very important. Filipinos have very, very good voices,” said Hershfield, now 84 and settled in the
United States.
The Nazis had robbed Lottie Hershfield of her childhood all too soon. She was just 7 years old
when Germany, her place of birth, no longer felt like home.
Adolf Hitler’s regime held Jews like Hershfield and her family in the same regard as animals; at the
park, benches carried signs that read “dogs and Jews not allowed.” The Nazis raided her family
home, and all the frightened child could do was to tightly clutch her doll as a fierce German
shepherd barked at her, as if ready to devour her.
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Stateless and unwanted, Hershfield’s family and the Jewish community then learned that a country
in the Pacific was ready to accept those seeking refuge. It was in the Philippines, a place largely
unheard of, thousands of kilometers away from Europe, where she got her childhood back.
“When you saw how the doors were basically closed to all of us except the Philippines … the
Filipino people are a very warm people, they’re a very friendly people,” Hershfield said in a
preview of the documentary “An Open Door: Jewish Rescue in the Philippines.”
“We played sipa (kick). We learned Filipino songs, there were quite a few performances. Art was
very important. Filipinos have very, very good voices,” said Hershfield, now 84 and settled in the
United States.
Sanctuary for Jews
The Philippines became a sanctuary for at least 1,200 Jews rendered stateless by the racist Nazi
regime, settling here between 1937 and 1941. They escaped just in time: Some 5 to 6 million Jews
would be killed during the Holocaust in the years immediately after they fled.
“When the Jews had nowhere to go, President Manuel Quezon was the one who allowed them to
come in. But when they came in, it was the Filipinos everywhere who made the Jews feel
welcome,” said researcher Sharon Delmendo, who has devoted the last six years researching the
arrival and settlement of Jews in the Philippines.
Delmendo has been on a mission to spread the word about the Philippines’ rescue of Jewish
survivors, a part of the nation’s history overshadowed by the traditional textbook retelling marked
by colonization, oppression and conflict.
“I think it’s very important for this to be known here. For one thing, it is because it’s a chapter of
Philippine history in which the Filipinos are the heroes,” said Delmendo, a Filipino-American
scholar based in New York who has extensively studied Philippine-US relations.
Humanitarian grounds
“It was President Quezon who did the sort of heavy lifting to get people here, but it was the
Filipinos who made them welcome,” Delmendo said in an interview on Friday at Ayala Museum,
where she delivered a lecture on the Jewish escape to the Philippines.
Quezon, who was President when the Philippines was part of the American Commonwealth,
authorized the entry of Jewish refugees to the Philippines with the concurrence of US High
Commissioner Paul McNutt toward the end of the 1930s.