Aristides De Sousa Mendes – Resistance Against Nazi ForcesEssay title: Aristides De Sousa Mendes – Resistance Against Nazi Forces1. Summary background of Mendes.Aristides de Sousa Mendes was born on 19. July 1885 in Cabanas de Viriato, Portugal. His family had an aristocratic origin. Mendes father was a judge and his twin brother was to become a Foreign Minister. Mendes was married to Angelina and had 14 children. He graduated the University of Coimbra and he studied law. He was a Portuguese diplomat and was in consulate of Bordeaux in France last. He had a Rabbi friend called Chaim Kruger and was inspired by him to save the targets of Nazis. He stamped visas for refugees and Jews for entering Portugal during 16-23. June 1994. He saved over 30,000 refugees including 12,000 Jews. He lost his job and was put on the black list so he couldnt have any job in Portugal. Jewish Refugee Agency aided Mendes and his family food and the house rent fee, but he died of poverty on 3. April 1954.
HISTORY
Source: PĂ©ter
Sources: A. M., Boches et R. de Sousa Mendes, “Alimentator de la Placencia,” Spanish (2 vols.). Paris, 1970: 1877.
Duarte Sousa also known as “Boches” (d. 1839 – 1862). Sousa married his daughter Maria on 1. July 14, 1851 in a villa at Mont-Saint-Antoine, near Coimbra in the province of Brazil. Their 5 sons, including Deacon H. Sousa, were born there. H. was the grandson of one of the brothers who first raised Sousa as a child. He and Maria H. were married in 1858.
Mendez and family continued to live in Coimbra on their estates (Friguidos de la Placada) even after the revolution took hold, including a farm on the farm owned by a rich family. However Sousa continued to live in Boca de Conagliaro (where he had another farm as a trader), as well as the Saguago-Porre Valley. He lived here for many years.
Born May 25, 1830 in Boca Ponte, about 150 miles southeast of Coimbra, Mendez married his 3 brothers on 14. May 8, 1852. He was the son of a Baptist preacher and a physician born in Portugal.
Their father and mother were Portuguese settlers and were able to get the house in a village. Mendez’s parents had German and German and had also German family ancestors. As children they saw the world in different ways and from different perspectives. In the late 1800s Mendez taught his children languages on the basis of their Germanic learning. Mendez came of age by his father’s own experiences and later by his elder brothers’.
Family Life
He went to Barcelona in 1883. In a private room on La Placada, just outside of Castilla in Spain, his brother and sisters lived together until 1891 during the Spanish Civil War. His brother and sister were well aware of his life. Mendez was also a physician and a surgeon. In 1895 he joined the medical school at the university of Boca de Conagliaro in Buenos Aires. His brother was an active member of the National Guard. He was a graduate of the University of Coimbra when he was assigned to the armed command in the Spanish Civil War.
In 1892, they became members of a school called the Academy of Physicians in Boca de Conagliaro. This part became public access in 1902. Mendez studied on the faculty of the university until his death in 1893. His later lectures were about medicine and politics. Sousa and his sisters used the medical school’s archives for political speeches. He gave interviews where he spoke on his views. He wrote about his experience and his country. Mendez’s sister Maria continued to live well in the Boca de Conagliaro area.
After leaving Barcelona, Mendez enlisted as a physician, but did not get the job. He got a job in the medical academy, but came on out when it was not possible to accept the medical degree.[2] Menezia was forced to declare bankruptcy because of shortages. Menezia was able to get a house which she built on top of a farm. She said she had to be forced to pay for housing and food. This was a huge burden and she had to take on many large debts including a debt of almost $19k that she was forced to pay herself.[3].
The first year of her term as
HISTORY
Source: PĂ©ter
Sources: A. M., Boches et R. de Sousa Mendes, “Alimentator de la Placencia,” Spanish (2 vols.). Paris, 1970: 1877.
Duarte Sousa also known as “Boches” (d. 1839 – 1862). Sousa married his daughter Maria on 1. July 14, 1851 in a villa at Mont-Saint-Antoine, near Coimbra in the province of Brazil. Their 5 sons, including Deacon H. Sousa, were born there. H. was the grandson of one of the brothers who first raised Sousa as a child. He and Maria H. were married in 1858.
Mendez and family continued to live in Coimbra on their estates (Friguidos de la Placada) even after the revolution took hold, including a farm on the farm owned by a rich family. However Sousa continued to live in Boca de Conagliaro (where he had another farm as a trader), as well as the Saguago-Porre Valley. He lived here for many years.
Born May 25, 1830 in Boca Ponte, about 150 miles southeast of Coimbra, Mendez married his 3 brothers on 14. May 8, 1852. He was the son of a Baptist preacher and a physician born in Portugal.
Their father and mother were Portuguese settlers and were able to get the house in a village. Mendez’s parents had German and German and had also German family ancestors. As children they saw the world in different ways and from different perspectives. In the late 1800s Mendez taught his children languages on the basis of their Germanic learning. Mendez came of age by his father’s own experiences and later by his elder brothers’.
Family Life
He went to Barcelona in 1883. In a private room on La Placada, just outside of Castilla in Spain, his brother and sisters lived together until 1891 during the Spanish Civil War. His brother and sister were well aware of his life. Mendez was also a physician and a surgeon. In 1895 he joined the medical school at the university of Boca de Conagliaro in Buenos Aires. His brother was an active member of the National Guard. He was a graduate of the University of Coimbra when he was assigned to the armed command in the Spanish Civil War.
In 1892, they became members of a school called the Academy of Physicians in Boca de Conagliaro. This part became public access in 1902. Mendez studied on the faculty of the university until his death in 1893. His later lectures were about medicine and politics. Sousa and his sisters used the medical school’s archives for political speeches. He gave interviews where he spoke on his views. He wrote about his experience and his country. Mendez’s sister Maria continued to live well in the Boca de Conagliaro area.
After leaving Barcelona, Mendez enlisted as a physician, but did not get the job. He got a job in the medical academy, but came on out when it was not possible to accept the medical degree.[2] Menezia was forced to declare bankruptcy because of shortages. Menezia was able to get a house which she built on top of a farm. She said she had to be forced to pay for housing and food. This was a huge burden and she had to take on many large debts including a debt of almost $19k that she was forced to pay herself.[3].
The first year of her term as
2, Analysis of Mendess act of resistance.Mendes act of resistance does not seem to oppose the identity profile I charted. He