Federal police filth are still hunting escapee's and persons 
protecting/assisting them.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,782085,00.html
Per Anger

Swedish diplomat who, along with Raoul Wallenberg, saved thousands of Jews 
from Nazi death camps

Lawrence Joffe
Thursday August 29, 2002
The Guardian

Thousands of Hungarian Jews were rescued from death in Nazi extermination 
camps thanks to the Swedish diplomat Per Anger, who has died aged 88.
Not only did Anger ferry out reports of the systematic extermination of 
Europe's Jews, he also fashioned false passports to save the lives of 
potential victims. As the enormity of the calamity became obvious, Sweden 
posted a special envoy to Budapest, operating under diplomatic cover, the 
now legendary Raoul Wallenberg. Anger, working hand in glove with 
Wallenberg, snatched several hundred Jews from forced marches out of Budapest.
Nor was Anger's heroism restricted to subverting the Holocaust. During the 
early 1940s, he had already established a reputation for siphoning vital 
intelligence from Berlin to Stockholm.
More than a decade later, after Hungary's abortive uprising against the 
Soviet Union in 1956, Anger- then based in Vienna - helped thousands to 
flee Budapest. And for more than five decades he doggedly pursued Soviet 
authorities for information about Wallenberg, whose capture by and possible 
murder in Russia became one of the cold war's causes c�l�bres.
Anger's diplomatic career started in January 1940, when he joined the 
Swedish delegate to Berlin as a 26-year-old trainee. At great personal risk 
he contacted underground movements, and conveyed their warnings of an 
impending German invasion of Scandinavia to Stockholm.
By the time his bosses alerted Norway, it was already too late. The Oslo 
government summoned the German military attach�, who denied everything. The 
next day Germany overran Norway.
Anger returned to Stockholm in June 1941, and worked in the foreign 
ministry's trade section dealing with Hungary. Impressed by his diligence 
and perspicacity, Anger's masters appointed him second secretary at the 
Swedish legation in Budapest, a position he took up on November 26 1942.
Anger's colleagues included Hugo Wohl, the Hungarian- Jewish head of a 
Swedish firm in Budapest; the Swedish legation's veteran chief, Carl Ivan 
Danielsson; and the Swedish Red Cross representative, Valdemar Langlet. 
Together they were to become, in the words of US Senator Tom Lantos, 
"radiant sparks of humanity that glowed in the darkest of midnights".
At first, Hungary seemed comparatively peaceful. Anger married his wife, 
Elena, in 1943, and found time to hunt game in Transylvania. In 1941, 
Hungary, under the rightwing regime of Admiral Horthy, had joined Germany 
in attacking the Soviet Union. Yet Third Reich pan-Aryan fantasies found 
little resonance among the Magyar nationalists of Budapest.
Hungary was also the only oasis for Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe. By 1944 
the community numbered nearly 750,000 people. Refugees told Anger of Nazi 
atrocities. Some camp escapees drew sketches of gas chambers, which Anger 
forwarded to his superiors in Stockholm.
Germany's defeat at Stalingrad in 1943 led some Hungarian politicians to 
consider signing a separate peace with the Soviet Union. But Hitler would 
have none of it. Frustrated with Budapest's vacillations, Germany invaded 
Hungary in March 1944.
For Hungary's Jews, this was catastrophe. They were corralled into ghettos, 
robbed of their property and forced to wear the yellow star. Next, the Nazi 
in charge of the murder of Europe's Jews, Adolph Eichmann, arrived in 
Budapest, and began rounding up every Jew in sight. Hugo Wohl approached 
Anger in desperation. The Swedish diplomat instantly issued Wohl with a 
false provisional Swedish passport. Soon hundreds of Jews followed Wohl's 
example, and other legations copied Anger's initiative, like the Papal 
Nuncio and the neutral Spanish.
But their efforts were a drop in the ocean. By the time Wallenberg arrived 
in July 1944 - at the instigation of the US War Refugee Board and Sweden's 
own Jewish community - Eichmann had sent more than 400,000 Jews to the 
death camps. A game of cat and mouse ensued. Wallenberg hosted Eichmann at 
the legation, but the Nazi, while accepting that Hitler was losing the war, 
insisted on carrying out his "duties", and ominously warned Wallenberg to 
avoid "accidents". Days later, a truck crushed Wallenberg's car - luckily 
without him inside.
Meanwhile, Anger, Wallenberg, Langlet and Danielsson set up bogus safe 
houses throughout Budapest, disguised as Swedish libraries and research 
institutes. Next, they started issuing a Shutzpass, or "protective pass", 
whose colourful royal Swedish motif persuaded the Nazis and their Hungarian 
lackeys to release Jews in their charge. But by November 1944, forced death 
marches had begun, and Anger and Wallenberg drove up and down the columns, 
issuing passes and defying German guards by literally snatching Jews from 
their hands.
In January 1945, Wallenberg bullied a senior German commander into 
cancelling plans for the wholesale massacre of Budapest's remaining Jews. 
Two days later the victorious Red Army arrived. Wallenberg was arrested as 
"a foreign spy" on January 17, and was never seen again. Anger, too, was 
taken into Soviet custody, but released three months later after Swiss 
intervention. He credited Wallenberg with saving 100,000 Jewish lives.
So what made Per Anger stand up to evil when so many other Europeans 
remained silent? Aspects of his upbringing suggest clues. He was born in 
Gothenburg, the eldest of three boys, to an engineer father and a language 
teacher mother. Theirs was a close-knit family, noted Elizabeth Skoglund in 
her 1997 biography, A Quiet Courage. Anger's deeply held Lutheran beliefs 
helped him through the first crisis in his life, the accidental death of 
his brother Jan, an air force pilot, in 1936.
Anger studied law at the universities of Stockholm and Uppsala. He 
graduated in 1939, and took up his Berlin posting after a brief stint in 
the army.
After returning to Sweden in 1945, he took various overseas appointments - 
Egypt and Ethiopia during 1946, France from 1953, Austria from 1955, and 
San Francisco in 1961. In 1966 he was put in charge of Sweden's 
international aid programme. He became ambassador to Australia in 1970 and 
Canada in 1976, and won a dream retirement posting - ambassador to the 
Bahamas - in 1978.
Anger's natural modesty made him keep Wallenberg's story alive in speeches 
and books, while downplaying his own role in wartime Budapest. When, in 
1956, he helped those thousands of Hungarians crossing the Austrian border, 
among them were several Jews whom he had saved in 1944.
In 1982 Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust museum named Anger as one of the 
"righteous among the nations", alongside saviours like Oskar Schindler and 
Wallenberg, and he was awarded honorary citizenship by Israel in September 
2000. In 1989 Anger confronted Mikhail Gorbachev about Wallenberg's 
whereabouts, but to no avail. Even at home Anger faced resistance, says 
Skoglund, as "pusillanimous" bureaucrats tried to muzzle him so as not to 
upset Russia.
He is survived by his wife, two sons and a daughter.
Per Johan Valentin Anger, diplomat, born December 7 1913; died August 25 2002

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