There are some people who are beyond my wildest understanding of their bravery and virtue, and this is one. The story’s title, ‘We are all Jews’: Israel honors US soldier who stared down Nazi 70 years ago, and here are the opening paras:
It was January, 1945 and Master Sgt. Roddie Edmonds had a gun to his head.
The commandant of the Stalag IXA POW Camp near Ziegenhain, Germany, ordered Edmonds, of the 422nd Infantry Regiment, to turn over the Jewish-American soldiers under his command. Edmonds and his men – Jews and non-Jews alike – stood together in formation.
“They cannot all be Jews,” the German said, looking over the more than 1,000 POWs.
“We are all Jews,” Edmonds responded.
“I will shoot you,” the commandant warned.
But Edmonds had his own warning: “According to the Geneva Convention, we only have to give our name, rank and serial number. If you shoot me, you will have to shoot all of us, and after the war you will be tried for war crimes.”
The commandant stood down.
Those four words uttered by Edmonds echo 70 years later, as a testament to the solidarity he and his men showed to their Jewish brothers in arms. And because of that, Edmonds’ name will be etched in history when he becomes the first American soldier to receive the Yad Vashem Holocaust and Research Center’s Righteous Among the Nations recognition and medal.
This is a description from one of the soldiers who was there:
Lester Tanner and Paul Stern were two of the Jewish POWs Edmonds protected, and recall how they stood next to him during the tense exchange with the German commandant.
“It was 70 years ago, but I remember it like it was yesterday,” Stern, 91, said from his home in Reston, Va. “He was very calm, even with a gun to his head. It’s amazing even to this day.”
I don’t know how a story like this has stayed buried so long.
