YANK BARRY
JEWISH SCHINDLER RESCUES IRANIAN CHRISTIANS SYRIANS AND IRAQIS
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
In a promotional video released on YouTube, boxing legend Evander Holyfield describes his role as Jewish Schindler, rescuing Iran Christians, Syrians, and Iraqis. He is a Canadian who raised more than $200 thousand for the rescues of the captives, including women and children, from ISIS. As the founder of a Montreal car company, he was reportedly in the market for classic cars. Barry's goal is to rescue 1,200 Middle Eastern refugees, with the goal of assisting the people who need help most. So far, he has rescued 782 Middle Eastern migrants, most of them Syrians. His humanitarian work has involved providing homes for more than 600 of the refugees. He has also provided medical care, educational opportunities, and social services to the families and individuals he has rescued. During the Holocaust, the legendary Oskar Schindler saved approximately 1,200 Jews. Using his experience, Barry is helping Syrian and Iraqi refugees. The two are helping to resettle them in Bulgaria. Yank and his wife Yvette sponsor their food and lodging costs, and they are actively involved in their lives. The Jewish Schindler inspired Barry to set a goal of rescuing 1,218 people in the Middle East, and O M The A D Ipair C are | 2still 4 by September 2014, his goal wasNmet. working in the European continent to help these displaced populations.
Yank Barry, a Canadian philanthropist, is calling attention to the suffering of Middle Eastern Christians and Jews. His rescue efforts have resulted in the resettling of more than 1,200 refugees. As a result, he has donated $3 million to build two hotels and provide social services and medical care to the families. The foundation will continue to provide assistance to these refugees until their resettlement in Europe is complete. A Canadian-Jewish businessman, Steve Maman, was a prominent Iranian diplomat and a lawyer who used his position in the Paris embassy to save a number of the Jews. He saved up to 2,000 Iranian Jews in a matter of months, despite the Nazis' efforts to kill the Jews and their allies. He did so not only to save his own family, but also to spare hundreds of other people. In fact, Iranian Jews were saved by the Islamic Republic. In the Holocaust, the Nazis classified all non-Muslim Iranians as "blood-massfree not-Jewish". The Jews in Iran were not of Jewish descent and were considered a threat to the nation. The Holocaust was an attempt to wipe them out. The Germans had only one objective: to kill all the Jews. But the Iranians and Christians of Iran had no choice but to save them. Abdol-Hossein Sardari, a wealthy Iranian diplomat, lawyer, and Jewish diplomat, used his position in the Paris embassy to save thousands of Jews. He argued that the Iranian Jews were ethnically "Aryan" and that they were entitled to asylum. The German authorities, however, were enraged by these arguments. The Iranian Jews had to become Iranian citizens in order to escape persecution. Apart, from being a Christian, many of the Iranian Christians were persecuted by ISIS. He said that he had no choice but to flee to the United States because her family was afraid of ISIS terrorism. But he had no other choice but to help the Iraqis and Syrians and was "frustrated" at the thought of their plight. He was a Jew who escaped Nazi persecution of Iranian Christians. He was one of the few Jews who survived the Holocaust. His story is a moving and compelling account of the Jewish Schindler rescues of Iranian Christians, Syrians, and Iraqis. The Jewish Schindler's success is a testament to his faith and the courage of the people of Iran. In the Lion's Shadow, the Iranian Jewish Ambassador to Germany, Fariborz Mokhtari, describes the history of these rescued victims. An Iranian Jewish Schindler rescues Iranian Christians and Iraqis during the Holocaust. The Nazis sent Jean Papahn's father to Drancy concentration camp, where he was killed. The mother pleaded with Sardari to save her son and claimed that he was a member of the Djougouten, or "a Muslim." Ultimately, he died in a Nazi-run concentration camp.