Wallenberg-signed document fetches over $13,000 at auction

The 1944 affidavit saved the life of a Hungarian Jewish woman by declaring that she was under the protection of the Swedish government.

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LOS ANGELES (JTA) — A document signed by the late Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg that saved a Jewish woman from the Nazis sold at auction for more than $13,000.

The document was purchased March 30 for $13,310 through the Nate D. Sanders auction house in Los Angeles. In keeping with company policy, Sanders did not divulge the identity of the seller or buyer.

Bidding started at $8,000 and attracted three other bidders besides the winning collector.

The affidavit signed by Wallenberg in Nazi-occupied Budapest on Sept. 22, 1944, saved the life of Zsigmondne Simko, a Hungarian Jewish woman, by declaring that she was under the protection of the Swedish government. The “protective” certificate or passport exempted the bearer from forced labor or wearing the Jewish yellow star.

Wallenberg, the scion of an aristocratic Swedish Lutheran family, was sent to Budapest in July 1944 through the joint efforts of the U.S. War Refugee Board and the Swedish government, the latter appointing Wallenberg as first secretary of its embassy in the Hungarian capital.

With no previous experience as an organizer, the 32-year old Wallenberg established a network of hospitals, nurseries and some 30 “safe houses,” and issued a stream of “protective” passports and papers to save an estimated 15,000 Jews from almost certain death.

When Russian armies forced German troops to abandon Budapest in February 1945, the new occupiers arrested Wallenberg as a suspected spy. He is believed to have died in a Soviet prison around 1947.

Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial authority, officially recognized Wallenberg in 1963 as a Righteous Among the Nations — a non-Jew who helped save Jews during the Holocaust.

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