Tom
Lantos: the congressman who survived Holocaust
LA
Times, Johanna Neuman
/ February 12, 2008
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Burlingame),
the only Holocaust survivor ever to serve in
Congress, died Monday of complications from
cancer of the esophagus at Bethesda Naval
Medical Center in Maryland, his staff said. He
was 80.
A
champion of civil liberties, Lantos founded the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus and supported
human rights struggles against both right-wing
and left-wing regimes in China, Russia, Myanmar,
Darfur and wherever official pressure could, as
he put it, "prevent another Holocaust." He also
was passionate about animal rights, working to
stop seal hunts, dog killings in foreign
countries, and horse slaughter, bear baiting and
the operation of puppy mills at home.
He also used his post as chairman of the House
Foreign Affairs Committee to highlight human
rights violators. He argued that nations with
bad records had no place on the U.N. Human
Rights Commission, that Beijing should not be
awarded the 2008 Olympics because of its human
rights record, and that corporations had an
obligation to protect individuals and press
freedoms. When executives of Yahoo Inc. appeared
before the committee last year to defend their
role in the jailing of a journalist by Chinese
officials, Lantos said, "While technologically
and financially you are giants, morally you are
Pygmies."
Vigilant against appeasement in foreign policy
-- whether the culprit was Adolf Hitler, Josef
Stalin or Saddam Hussein -- Lantos was a
supporter of the Iraq war even though his 12th
Congressional District, stretching from
southwest San Francisco down the peninsula to
take in much of San Mateo County, was
overwhelmingly opposed. Although he led the
debate for authorization of the campaign to oust
Hussein in 2002, he later became disillusioned
with faulty prewar intelligence and called for
an independent investigation into what went
wrong.
"The American people have not sent us here just
to be an amen cho- rus for this administration,"
he said when he finally rose to criticize the
war. "There are serious problems and we should
be debating serious solutions."
Last year he opposed the surge of extra troops
in Iraq, telling Army Gen. David H. Petraeus,
who was lobbying Congress for support: "Our
efforts in Iraq are a mess, and throwing in more
troops will not improve it."
Lantos, a staunch supporter of Israel, led a
U.S. walkout from a United Nations conference on
racism in Durban, South Africa, in 2001 over its
anti-Semitic language. But he also was an
advocate of talking to renegade regimes. He was
among the first members of Congress to visit
Libya in 2004, lauding Moammar Kadafi's
renunciation of weapons of mass destruction. And
when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San
Francisco) met with Syrian President Bashar
Assad last year, Lantos was at her side.
"Dialogue," he said, "is not appeasement."
Pelosi, calling his death "a profound loss for
the Congress and for the nation and a terrible
loss for me personally," said in a statement
Monday that Lantos had used his chairmanship "to
empower the powerless and give voice to the
voiceless throughout the world. Having lived
through the worst evil known to mankind, Tom
Lantos translated the experience into a lifetime
commitment to the fight against anti-Semitism."
Born Feb. 1, 1928, to a middle-class family in
Budapest, Hungary, Lantos was 16 when Nazis
occupied the city in 1944. Sent to a labor camp
in a nearby village, he escaped, was recaptured
and beaten. After he escaped a second time, he
took refuge with his aunt in one of the safe
houses maintained by Raoul Wallenberg, the
Swedish diplomat who saved the lives of
thousands of Jews during the Holocaust. With his
blue eyes and blond hair, Lantos often served as
a courier, delivering food to Jews in hiding and
working for the anti-Nazi underground.
After the war he learned that his mother had
died in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and that
other relatives had died as well. He located his
childhood sweetheart, Annette Tilleman, a cousin
of the glamorous Gabor sisters. He came to the
United States in 1947, earning a degree in
economics from the University of Washington and
a doctorate from UC Berkeley. Tilleman arrived
in 1948 to finish high school in Seattle. They
were married in 1950.
Lantos, calling himself "an American by choice,"
took a quixotic path to Congress. Before his
election, his resume was that of an academic who
had taught economics at San Francisco State
University, served as president of the Millbrae
School District board, and been an occasional
advisor to Congress on economic and foreign
policy. But in 1978, Democrat Leo J. Ryan became
the first and only congressman ever slain in the
line of duty, killed in Guyana, where he went to
investigate whether Americans were being held
against their will by cult leader Jim Jones.
Ryan was gunned down just before Jones
engineered a mass suicide among his followers.
Republican Bill Royer won a special election to
serve out Ryan's term. But in 1980, Lantos
surprised Royer with an upset victory to take
the seat. Despite an attempted return by Royer
and later efforts to oust Lantos for his hawkish
foreign policy views, he had won reelection with
comfortable margins of more than 65% ever since.
His first major bill in Congress was to give
honorary American citizenship to Wallenberg,
whom Lantos called "the central figure in my
life."
Lantos, an avid swimmer who never smoked,
announced last month that he had been diagnosed
with cancer and would retire at year's end.
"It is only in the United States that a
penniless survivor of the Holocaust and a
fighter in the anti-Nazi underground could have
received an education, raised a family and had
the privilege of serving the last three decades
of his life as a member of Congress," he said.
"I will never be able to express fully my
profoundly felt gratitude to this great
country."
With his mane of white hair and his
Hungarian-accented English, Lantos cut a dashing
figure on Capitol Hill. But he could also be a
sarcastic, partisan inquisitor. When Samuel
Pierce Jr., the former secretary of Housing and
Urban Development, said he needed more time to
prepare for hearings because he was having
trouble finding an attorney, Lantos said, "I can
understand not being able to find affordable
housing in Washington but not an attorney."
Lantos did not attend the United Nations' annual
commemoration of the Holocaust last month. His
remarks were delivered by his daughter, Katrina
Lantos Swett.
In his speech, Lantos called on the world
community, "on this day dedicated to one of the
worst episodes in human history," to
"re-dedicate ourselves to stopping current
tragedies such as the genocide in Darfur -- and
there is no other proper word for this atrocity
-- and to preventing such inhuman cruelty in the
future." Saying that "the veneer of civilization
is paper thin," Lantos added, "we are its
guardians, and we can never rest."
He is survived by his wife, Annette, their
children, Katrina Lantos Swett of New Hampshire
and Annette Lantos Dick of Colorado, as well as
17 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Services are pending.