In 1938, Nicholas Winton was a young stockbroker in London. He was keenly aware of the events unfolding on the continent. Jews were under threat in Nazi-occupied Europe. Anti-Semitism was ...
Among the names that didn’t make the cut were the Winton line, referencing Nicholas Winton’s rescue of Jewish children during ...
Names were rejected because they may have been hard to hear clearly on announcements or could have been abbreviated and used ...
Now a new load of rejected Overground names from the 2024 renaming has come to light, revealed by Jim Waterson’s London ...
For example, One Life (2023), the biopic of British rescuer Nicholas Winton, straightforwardly endorses mainstream assumptions about the value of remembrance. Read more: What One Life gets wrong ...
Winton line: “Nicholas Winton organised the rescue of 669 children, mostly Jewish, from Czechoslovakia on the eve of the Second World War. This operation, later known as the Czech ...
The world knows Sir Nicholas Winton as “Britain’s Schindler,” a man whose efforts before the Second World War led to 669 Jewish children escaping certain doom at the hands of the Nazis.
This is the story of Nicholas Winton, a young London stockbroker. His involvement began in 1938, when violence against Jews in Germany was escalating and Hitler managed to have his army march into ...
BookEnds Community Session will be from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Wadena City Library at 210 First St. SW. Hear ...