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File #: 12-1031    Version: 1 Name: 8/9/12 Raoul Wallenberg Proclamation
Type: Proclamation Status: Filed
File created: 8/9/2012 In control: City Council
On agenda: 8/9/2012 Final action: 8/9/2012
Enactment date: Enactment #:
Title: Raoul Wallenberg Proclamation
Attachments: 1. Wallenberg Proclamation.pdf
Title
Raoul Wallenberg Proclamation
Memorandum
PROCLAMATION
Honoring Raoul Wallenberg
August 4, 2012

WHEREAS, On August 4, 1912 Raoul Wallenberg was born in Lidingö, Sweden to one of his country’s pre-eminent families of industrialists, bankers and diplomats; and
WHEREAS, He came to Ann Arbor in September 1931 to study architecture at the University of Michigan; and
WHEREAS, While he was a student and resident of the city of Ann Arbor, he lived in boarding houses on Huron, Haven and Hill Streets, as well as 308 East Madison which remains standing; and
WHEREAS, He had many friends who admired his intelligence, ingenuity, and courageous self-assurance, and who prized his lack of pretension, sense of fun, and keen interest in the world around him; and
WHEREAS, He came to love Ann Arbor where he watched football in Michigan Stadium, canoed on the Huron, bicycled in the countryside, and attended concerts in Hill Auditorium, writing in a letter to his grandfather: “I feel so at home in my little Ann Arbor that I’m beginning to sink down roots here and have a hard time imagining my leaving it;” and
WHEREAS, He graduated at the top of his class in the architecture program, completing his degree in only three-and-a-half years and winning the American Institute of Architects Silver Medal; and

WHEREAS, Having returned to Sweden where he became a businessman, at the request of the US War Refugee Board, he was sent to Budapest, Hungary in 1944 as an official Swedish diplomat with the mission of saving as many lives as possible by whatever means at his disposal; and

WHEREAS, He purchased and organized an elaborate system of buildings that he placed under Swedish diplomatic protection and used as hospitals, kitchens and safe houses to shelter Jews facing deportation to death camps; and
WHEREAS, He repeatedly put his life at risk to build a network of courageous assistants to fabricate passes conferring Swedish protection and to distribute thousands of these documents to p...

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