[AZORES-Genealogy] A true hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes!!!

2016-08-04 Thread mnk
Also recently there was an episode on "mysteries at the Museum " featuring his 
story. Very inspirational!
MNK 

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[AZORES-Genealogy] A true hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes!!!

2016-08-04 Thread linda
http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/08/04/486735086/remembering-portugals-schindler

Featured on a segment on NPR this morning.

:)

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[AZORES-Genealogy] A true hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes!!!

2010-07-06 Thread Eliseu Manuel Pacheco da Silva
Just to your knowledge!

 

 

Contact: Miguel Ávila, Assistant Editor, The Portuguese Tribune

Website:  http://www.portuguesetribune.com/
http://www.portuguesetribune.com/

 

SF Bay Area Remembers “Angel of Bordeaux” Aristides de Sousa Mendes 

San José, California, June 6, 2010 – I would rather stand with God against
man, than with man against God. This famous quote belongs to Consul General
of Portugal in Bordeaux, France, Aristides de Sousa Mendes, who in nine days
in June 1940 saved 30,000 World War II refugees, among them over 10,000
Jews, who were fleeing Nazi-occupied territories. Prior to his assignment in
Bordeaux, Sousa Mendes served as Consul General of Portugal in San Francisco
from 1921 to 1924. 
The Bay Area Portuguese-American community will be honoring the “Angel of
Bordeaux” with a placement of a wreath at the Portuguese Consulate, 3298
Washington Street, San Francisco, CA on Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 10 AM
celebrating the 70th anniversary of Sousa Mendes’ act of defiance against
his superiors, a true Act of Conscience. An art exhibit and reception will
follow at the Portuguese Consulate. Artists Nathan Oliveira, John Mattos,
Maxine Olson, João de Brito, Maria Pavão-Hadsell, Roberto Ávila, and Sousa
Mendes’ own grandson Sebastian Mendes are confirmed. 
The event is hosted by the Consul General of Portugal, António Costa Moura,
the Portuguese Fraternal Society of America, and The Portuguese Tribune.
Confirmed guests include the Consul General of Israel, the Office of the
Mayor of San Francisco, and members of the Sousa Mendes family. The event is
open to the public. 
Special intention Masses and other events are planned throughout the world.
At the Vatican, Their Eminences William Cardinal Levada, Claudio Cardinal
Hummes, and Renato Raffaele Cardinal Martino will concelebrate a
Thanksgiving Mass at the Church of Santa Maria di Transpontina on June 17 in
Sousa Mendes’ honor. Special Masses will be said at the cathedrals of Lisbon
and Braga in Portugal and other events will take place in Paris and Bordeaux
in France, São Paulo, Fortaleza, and São Salvador da Bahia in Brazil,
Newark, NJ, Brooklyn, NY, Montreal, Canada, and San José, CA where a special
Mass will be said on Sunday, June 13, 2010 at 11 AM at Five Wounds
Portuguese National Church, 1375 East Santa Clara Street, during the
celebration of the Day of Portugal. 
Aristides de Sousa Mendes was born on July 19, 1885 in Cabanas de Viriato,
district of Viseu, Portugal, to a rural aristocratic and devout Catholic
family. After completing his law degree at the University of Coimbra, he
pursue along with his twin brother César, a diplomatic career. Bordeaux was
not the first assignment where Sousa Mendes fought for his convictions. At
age 55 nearly reaching the end of his diplomatic career and the father of 14
children, Sousa Mendes put his life and those of his family at risk by
disobeying dictator António de Oliveira Salazar’s strict orders not to issue
any visas to Jews and foreigners of unknown origin. In the end, he lost his
diplomatic career, could not exercise law, had to surrender his
foreign-issued driver’s license, was stripped of his pension, suffered a
stroke that left him partially paralyzed, lost his wife Maria Angelina in
1948, lost his children to emigration, and died in poverty on April 3, 1954.
Two days after his death, his twin brother César received a handwritten note
from Salazar with only two words on it: “My condolences.” In 2007, Sousa
Mendes was selected in a Portuguese TV program as the third Greatest
Portuguese of all time. 
What is less known about Aristides de Sousa Mendes is that he was Consul
General of Portugal in San Francisco between October 15, 1921 and 1924 when
he was assigned to Maranhão, Brazil. 
His ninth and tenth children, Carlos and Sebastião, were born in Berkeley on
February 11, 1922 and San Francisco on October 7, 1923 respectively. Carlos
died on June 4, 1999 in Los Angeles and Sebastião died on December 17, 2006
in Scottsdale, Arizona. Both brothers opted for US Citizenship and served in
the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II. In 1950, Sousa Mendes’ 13th
child, John Paul Abranches, who was born in Louvain, Belgium in 1932,
immigrated to the United States, joined the Army, and moved to the San
Francisco Bay Area. He died on February 5, 2009 in Antioch, CA, at age 78.
His daughter Teresinha lives in the San Joaquin Valley.

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RE: [AZORES-Genealogy] A true hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes!!!

2010-07-06 Thread nancy jean baptiste

Eliseu,

Thank you for sending this.

Nancy
 


From: eliseuman...@sapo.pt
To: azores@googlegroups.com
Subject: [AZORES-Genealogy] A true hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes!!!
Date: Tue, 6 Jul 2010 16:33:40 +





Just to your knowledge!
 
 
Contact: Miguel Ávila, Assistant Editor, The Portuguese Tribune
Website: http://www.portuguesetribune.com/
 
SF Bay Area Remembers “Angel of Bordeaux” Aristides de Sousa Mendes 

San José, California, June 6, 2010 – I would rather stand with God against 
man, than with man against God. This famous quote belongs to Consul General of 
Portugal in Bordeaux, France, Aristides de Sousa Mendes, who in nine days in 
June 1940 saved 30,000 World War II refugees, among them over 10,000 Jews, who 
were fleeing Nazi-occupied territories. Prior to his assignment in Bordeaux, 
Sousa Mendes served as Consul General of Portugal in San Francisco from 1921 to 
1924. 
The Bay Area Portuguese-American community will be honoring the “Angel of 
Bordeaux” with a placement of a wreath at the Portuguese Consulate, 3298 
Washington Street, San Francisco, CA on Thursday, June 17, 2010 at 10 AM 
celebrating the 70th anniversary of Sousa Mendes’ act of defiance against his 
superiors, a true Act of Conscience. An art exhibit and reception will follow 
at the Portuguese Consulate. Artists Nathan Oliveira, John Mattos, Maxine 
Olson, João de Brito, Maria Pavão-Hadsell, Roberto Ávila, and Sousa Mendes’ own 
grandson Sebastian Mendes are confirmed. 
The event is hosted by the Consul General of Portugal, António Costa Moura, the 
Portuguese Fraternal Society of America, and The Portuguese Tribune. Confirmed 
guests include the Consul General of Israel, the Office of the Mayor of San 
Francisco, and members of the Sousa Mendes family. The event is open to the 
public. 
Special intention Masses and other events are planned throughout the world. At 
the Vatican, Their Eminences William Cardinal Levada, Claudio Cardinal Hummes, 
and Renato Raffaele Cardinal Martino will concelebrate a Thanksgiving Mass at 
the Church of Santa Maria di Transpontina on June 17 in Sousa Mendes’ honor. 
Special Masses will be said at the cathedrals of Lisbon and Braga in Portugal 
and other events will take place in Paris and Bordeaux in France, São Paulo, 
Fortaleza, and São Salvador da Bahia in Brazil, Newark, NJ, Brooklyn, NY, 
Montreal, Canada, and San José, CA where a special Mass will be said on Sunday, 
June 13, 2010 at 11 AM at Five Wounds Portuguese National Church, 1375 East 
Santa Clara Street, during the celebration of the Day of Portugal. 
Aristides de Sousa Mendes was born on July 19, 1885 in Cabanas de Viriato, 
district of Viseu, Portugal, to a rural aristocratic and devout Catholic 
family. After completing his law degree at the University of Coimbra, he pursue 
along with his twin brother César, a diplomatic career. Bordeaux was not the 
first assignment where Sousa Mendes fought for his convictions. At age 55 
nearly reaching the end of his diplomatic career and the father of 14 children, 
Sousa Mendes put his life and those of his family at risk by disobeying 
dictator António de Oliveira Salazar’s strict orders not to issue any visas to 
Jews and foreigners of unknown origin. In the end, he lost his diplomatic 
career, could not exercise law, had to surrender his foreign-issued driver’s 
license, was stripped of his pension, suffered a stroke that left him partially 
paralyzed, lost his wife Maria Angelina in 1948, lost his children to 
emigration, and died in poverty on April 3, 1954. Two days after his death, his 
twin brother César received a handwritten note from Salazar with only two words 
on it: “My condolences.” In 2007, Sousa Mendes was selected in a Portuguese TV 
program as the third Greatest Portuguese of all time. 
What is less known about Aristides de Sousa Mendes is that he was Consul 
General of Portugal in San Francisco between October 15, 1921 and 1924 when he 
was assigned to Maranhão, Brazil. 
His ninth and tenth children, Carlos and Sebastião, were born in Berkeley on 
February 11, 1922 and San Francisco on October 7, 1923 respectively. Carlos 
died on June 4, 1999 in Los Angeles and Sebastião died on December 17, 2006 in 
Scottsdale, Arizona. Both brothers opted for US Citizenship and served in the 
U.S. Army in Europe during World War II. In 1950, Sousa Mendes’ 13th child, 
John Paul Abranches, who was born in Louvain, Belgium in 1932, immigrated to 
the United States, joined the Army, and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. He 
died on February 5, 2009 in Antioch, CA, at age 78. His daughter Teresinha 
lives in the San Joaquin Valley.

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