Visas for Life: The Righteous and Honorable Diplomats
Dr. Peter Zürcher
 
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Peter Zürcher, Acting Representative of Swiss Interests in Budapest, 1945

In December 1945, Consul Carl Lutz appointed Swiss lawyer Dr. Peter Zürcher to be his temporary representative in Pest.  The appointment of this energetic man was a stroke of extraordinary luck.  A few days before the Soviets occupied Pest, Zürcher heard of a plan be the SS to murder the 70,000 inhabitants of the ghetto in a last minute act of genocide.  Zürcher, along with Swiss representative Ernst Vonrufs and Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, threatened the SS commander with bringing him to trial for war crimes if he carried out this horrific plan.  Their threat worked, and the SS general ordered his troops not to enter the ghetto and even to protect Jews from the fascist Arrow Cross.  Because of this heroic action, most of the Jews of the Pest ghetto survived.  In addition, Zürcher intervened on behalf of the Jews living in Swiss safe houses in the international ghetto to prevent their murder by the Arrow Cross. 

Zürcher received the Righteous Among the Nations award in 1998.

Tschuy, Theo. Dangerous Diplomacy. (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2000).


Information compiled as part of an ongoing research project of the Institute for the Study of Rescue and Altruism in the Holocaust, a nonprofit corporation (ISRAH).  If you quote from this page, please credit: Visas for Life: The Righteous and Honorable Diplomats Project.