Banner Telefónica
  • Login
Sunday, May 11, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • es Español
  • en English
subscribe
thediplomatinspain
video channel
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
thediplomatinspain
Home Valija Diplomática

The Government grants Spanish nationality to Sephardic Peter René Pérez, Holocaust survivor

Eduardo González
20 de February de 2025
in Valija Diplomática
0
The Foreign Minister decorates Sephardic Pedro René Pérez, Holocaust survivor

Peter René Pérez receives the decoration from Albares. / Photo: MAEC

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Eduardo González

The Council of Ministers granted Spanish nationality on Tuesday to Peter René Pérez, 89 years old, a Holocaust survivor and, in his own words, the “last Sephardic of the Vienna community”.

According to the Official State Gazette (BOE) published on Wednesday, Spanish nationality by letter of nature has been granted to him by King Felipe VI at the proposal of the Minister of the Presidency, Justice and Relations with the Courts, Félix Bolaños, and “in view of the exceptional circumstances that concur with Mr. Peter René Pérez”.

Peter René Pérez, born in Vienna in 1936 and son of a Bulgarian Sephardic and an Austrian Catholic, was part of the Sephardic Jewish community of the Austrian capital, which in those years was made up of a thousand people. In 1938, his father and uncle managed to flee to Paris in the face of harassment by the Gestapo. Peter René’s brother was later able to escape in a convoy for Jewish children, and Peter René and his mother managed to leave Vienna in 1939 after obtaining a passport to reach Paris.

However, after the German offensive in France, Peter René Pérez and his parents fled Paris and were captured and interned in 1941 (when he was only five years old) in the Rivesaltes camp, at the foot of the Pyrenees.

In this camp, created by Vichy France to confine “undesirable foreigners” who could represent a “potential danger” to the country, he shared internment with prisoners of gypsy ethnicity and numerous Spanish republicans who would later save his life. In Rivesaltes, Peter René learned Spanish and used fandangos to communicate with the gypsy and Spanish prisoners and, in this way, find out who was still alive.

In September 1942, after the Nazis had taken over the south of France and cleared the Rivesaltes camp for military use, Peter René and his family were spared deportation to the Auschwitz extermination camp (and therefore almost certain death) by Spanish prisoners who falsified their papers so that they could work and live in the La Caunette mine. They remained in this mine until its closure in 1948, when they returned to Vienna, where Peter René Pérez still resides today.

On 27 January 2024, Peter René Pérez gave his testimony in the Spanish Senate on the occasion of the State Act for the Day of Remembrance of the Holocaust and the Prevention of Crimes against Humanity, in which he recalled the persecution he suffered in his childhood and stated that, as “the last Sephardic Jew in the Vienna community”, he was very happy to return to Spain.

At the same time, in an interview with the Europa Press agency, Pérez defended the “two-state solution” (Israel and Palestine) to end the war in the Middle East, but warned that this measure would not guarantee that “something like October 7” would not happen again, referring to the Hamas attacks on Israeli territory, which triggered the current Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip.

A few days later, he was awarded the Civil Merit Commendation by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, José Manuel Albares, for “the courage shown in telling the world about his experience and transmitting a message of peace and brotherhood” and, according to Albares, “in recognition of his bravery, together with that of his entire family and the Sephardic community that managed to flee from Nazi injustice, his courage in telling the world about his experience and transmitting a message of peace and brotherhood and his desire to preserve Ladino as a language of communication.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Foreign Minister will explain Spain’s actions against Trump’s plan in Gaza in Congress

Next Post

“We have to be courageous and determined: Ukraine’s struggle is the struggle for all of us”

Eduardo González

Eduardo González

Next Post
“We have to be courageous and determined: Ukraine’s struggle is the struggle for all of us”

"We have to be courageous and determined: Ukraine's struggle is the struggle for all of us"

Recommended

80 years since the liberation of Mauthausen, the “Spanish” concentration camp

80 years since the liberation of Mauthausen, the “Spanish” concentration camp

5 days ago

Newsletter

"Stay informed through our pages and always stay one step ahead. With in-depth analysis, exclusive reports and comprehensive coverage of the events that are shaping our present, our newspaper is more than just news, it is a window to the future."

Sections

Newspaper archive

February 2025
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728  
« Jan   Mar »

About Us

The Diplomat in Spain is the reference digital newspaper for diplomats and companies that want to be well informed.

© 2024 The Diplomat in Spain.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • News
    • Spain
    • World
    • The world in Spain
    • Diplomatic Breakfast
    • Diplomacy with a history
    • The bag
    • Social life
  • Tribune
  • Analysis
  • Trends
  • Embassies
    • Embassies Directory
    • Protocol
    • International legislation
  • UNWTO News
  • Leisure
    • Libros
    • Culture & Art
    • Música
    • Movies
    • Niños
    • Espectáculos
    • Teatro
  • Diplomatic club
  • Vip Club

© 2024 The Diplomat in Spain.

Go to mobile version
  • English
  • Español