Walter Bingham Knows Jewish History, Because He Lived It (INN) ISRAEL NATIONAL NEWS) By David Lev 03/23/12)
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/154066#.T2v57cWO2So
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Over the past century or so, the Jewish people have experienced
phenomenal changes – from the nadir of the Holocaust, to the pride of
the establishment of the State of Israel, to the revitalization of
Jewish life and culture, the release of Jews imprisoned in the Soviet
Union, the miracles of the Six Day War – until our own days, with the
threat of annihilation, this time by Iranian nuclear weapons.
Many people take events as they come, without fitting them into
the “big picture.” Not veteran Arutz Sheva jorunalist Walter Bingham,
though; at 88 years of age, he´s not only lived through the most
important events of the the last century – he´s felt them, and as a
journalist of many years, he´s put the pieces together, trying to
understand the impact of events on the Jewish people of a whole.
Take the Anschluss – the takeover of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938,
an event that Bingham, who was born in 1924, lived through. “There is
a direct connection between the Anschluss and Kristallnacht,” he
says; if not for the Anschluss, Herschel Grynszpan might not have
murdered German diplomat Ernst Eduard vom Rath in Paris, and
Kristallnacht might not have happened when it did. “There were many
Polish Jews in Austria at the time of the Anschluss,” Bingham
said. “After Germany took over Austria, the Poles were afraid that
the Jews would try to return to their homeland, so they passed a law
saying that any Pole who had been out of the country for more than
five years needed a special stamp in their passport to return home.
“Naturally, the Poles refused to stamp the passports of Jews,
rendering them essentially stateless,” Bingham says. “The Nazis were
unhappy with this, and started rounding up Jews in mid 1938, dumping
them at the Polish border. The Poles and the Nazis argued with each
other for days, each trying to keep the Jews on the other side of the
border. In the end, Poland relented because the Nazis were stronger.”
Bingham´s family was of Polish extraction, and the Nazis deported his
father, sending him to Poland (he eventually died there, says
Bingham, but his mother survived the war).
Among those deported was the family of Herschel Grynszpan, a 17-year-
old Jew living illegally in Paris. Outraged at what was happening,
Grynszpan acquired a gun, Bingham said, and demanded an audience with
the German ambassador to France. “Naturally they would not let him
see the ambassador, and instead they sent him to von Rath, who was a
third secretary. Grynszpan, taking what he could get, shot and killed
von Rath. Twelve days later, the ´spontaneous´ Kristallnacht
destruction took place, and the Holocaust essentially started.”
Bingham´s early experiences in Germany have helped shape his strong
Jewish identity. “When I was in the early grades, before the rise of
Hitler, I was a child like all the other children” in his public
school class. “I played ball with the other children, and they would
pass me the ball and I would pass it back to them. Then Hitler came,
and everything changed.”
Eventually, he says, the other kids stopped passing him the ball –
influenced as they were by the Hitler Youth activities they were
required to attend. It was a small start to what would be the
eventual isolation and rejection of Jews by German society. “Soon the
teachers would stop calling on me when they presented questions to
the class – they couldn´t take the chance that the Jew would know the
answer, while an Aryan wouldn´t.”
Eventually, Bingham was thrown out of school, as were all the other
Jewish students, as well as the Jewish teachers, professors, and
educators. “After a while the authorities gave us a building to study
in, which of course was the most dilapidated building in town,”
Bingham says. “But that school was the best one in Germany, because
it had the top teaching staff in the country, since it was the only
place the top professors and educators could work.”
Bingham´s family was very Zionist, he said, and Walter was active in
an Orthodox Zionist youth group, where he learned skills that could
be used on a Kibbutz in Israel. Walter was able to leave Germany on a
Kindertransport, and spent the remainder of the war in England, where
he remained until making Aliyah a few years ago.
While in England, Bingham joined the British Army, where he was
trained to drive a “duck” - or a DUKW, a large amphibious vehicle
that transported goods and personnel to ships off the British coast.
He eventually mastered the art of driving the 2.5 ton “duck,” but
then, he said, he did something “you are never supposed to do in the
army – I volunteered to drive an ambulance.” Bingham figured that
driving an ambulance was safer than driving a duck, which was
vulnerable to Nazi air strikes. At the very least, he felt, the Red
Cross on the outside of the ambulance would ensure that his vehicle
was not bombed to bits.
As it turned out, though, the “Duck” drivers were the ones who made
out better. “The Nazis did not stage an air attack on Normandy, where
they sent all of us” as part of the Allies´ D-Day invasion of Europe.
But as an ambulance driver, Bingham was sent “right to the front
lines, with bombs, missiles, and bullets going off all around us.” He
himself was nearly hit numerous times – while his comrades were
falling all around him, some dead and some injured. Eventually, his
ambulance was blown up, and using his combat training, Bingham made
his way back to base – where he took another ambulance and returned
right to the front, to evacuate the wounded. Still under heavy
fire, “G-d was with me that day, and I got out alive.” And for his
trouble, Bingham was awarded Britain´s highest military honor.
Bingham eventually went on to a career manufacturing children´s
clothing, and writing for prominent Jewish publications in Britain –
as well as roles in several Harry Potter films (!) - before making
Aliyah in 2004. But that´s a story for another day, Bingham
says. “The main thing is that I try every day, through my program on
Arutz Sheva and other activities, to increase the bond between the
Jewish people and the Land of Israel.” If there´s one thing Bingham
has learned from his fateful personal history, it´s how important an
independent state is for the Jews. “A strong Jewish people and a
strong Land of Israel are my only agendas,” he says, “for obvious
reasons.” (IsraelNationalNews © 2012 03/23/12)
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