[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 147 (2001), Part 5] [Extensions of Remarks] [Page 6658] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]TRIBUTE TO HERBERT PUNDIK ______ HON. TOM LANTOS of california in the house of representatives Tuesday, May 1, 2001 Mr. LANTOS. Mr. Speaker, I invite my colleagues to join me today in paying tribute to Mr. Herbert Pundik--a man who has dedicated his life to promoting greater understanding and tolerance between people of different cultures, especially the Palestinians and the Israelis. His commitment to humanism and his many commentaries have had a great influence in both his native Denmark and his adopted Israel. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Pundik was only 16 years old when he himself was a victim of intolerance and racism. Born September 23, 1927, in Copenhagen, Mr. Pundik was brought up in a Jewish family, and he was only 12 years old when the Nazis invaded Denmark on April 9, 1940. Initially the occupation did not bring much change to lives of the Danish Jews as the Danish government and the Danish laws remained in effect until August 29, 1943, ensuring, among other things, that no Jew in Denmark ever had to wear the yellow star. On October 1, 1943, the Nazis decided to round up all the Danish Jews and deport them to concentration camps. Fortunately, G.F. Duckwitz, a German diplomat with contacts among the Danish Social Democrats, tipped off the leading Danish Social Democrat, Hans Hedtoft, regarding the deportation. Hedtoft quickly alerted the Jewish community, and a spontaneous and courageous rescue action developed among Danes. During the evacuation Mr. Pundik and his family, along with most other Danish Jews, were transported by fishing vessel to neutral Sweden. In 1945 Mr. Pundik joined the Danish voluntary forces in Sweden (Den Danske Brigade), and when Denmark was liberated in May of that year, he returned to Denmark to complete his high school education. Mr. Speaker, Herbert Pundik recently wrote a book published in November 1998 about the incidents surrounding the great rescue of the Danish Jews--In Denmark it Could Not Happen. I urge all my colleagues to read this book to learn the details of how the Danish population courageously committed themselves to common human decency and saved virtually their entire Jewish community. Mr. Pundik later went to Israel, where he was a member of the Israeli voluntary forces from 1948-49 when Israel fought its war of independence. He returned briefly to Denmark and married Susie Ginzborg in 1951. In 1954 they immigrated to Israel where they raised their three children. Their oldest son was killed as a soldier in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Another son was one of the two Israelis who initiated the Oslo peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians. Professionally Mr. Pundik pursued a career as a journalist. He was a co-founder and editor of the Danish periodical Israel, and through the years he has worked at both Danish and Israeli newspapers covering major international crises such as the Vietnam War, the Kashmir conflict, and the Middle East struggle. In 1963 he began working as an international correspondent for one of the largest Danish newspapers Politiken and in 1967 he became a permanent employee. Three years later he was promoted to editor-in-chief. Under terms of a unique agreement, Mr. Pundik managed Politiken for 23 years, commuting forth and back between Denmark and Israel each month and spending roughly three weeks in Copenhagen and one week in Tel Aviv. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Pundik's dedication to human rights and tolerance has earned him many prizes--among those are honorary citizenship of Latvia in 1991 because he was the first person to suggest that Denmark send a cultural representative to Latvia, even though the country was then technically a part of the Soviet Union. In 1993 Mr. Pundik retired from his position as editor-in-chief at Politiken, but he has continued his humanitarian efforts. He is a member on the board of Politiken, the coordinator for the International Alliance for Arab-Israel Peace and a member on the board of directors of Humanity in Action, an exchange student program with participants from the U.S., the Netherlands, and Denmark. Mr. Speaker, often in today's world too much attention is focused on the violent aspects of society. Today however, we have the opportunity to pay tribute to an extraordinary man who is a consistent and eloquent advocate for peace and tolerance. Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to join me in recognizing Mr. Herbert Pundik. ____________________