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  1. Raoul Wallenberg was a Swedish architect, businessman, diplomat, and humanitarian. He is widely celebrated for saving thousands of Jews in German-occupied Hungary during the Holocaust from German Nazis and Hungarian Arrow Cross perpetrators during the later stages of World War II.

  2. Raoul Wallenberg [ ˌɹɑːʊl ˈvalːənbæɹʝ] (* 4. August 1912 in Kappsta auf Lidingö bei Stockholm; Lebensspuren bis Ende Juli 1947, formell festgelegtes Todesdatum 31. Juli 1952 [1]) war ein schwedischer Diplomat. Bekanntheit erlangte er durch seinen Einsatz zur Rettung ungarischer Juden während des Holocaust im Zweiten Weltkrieg und ...

  3. A considerable number of honours, memorials and statues have been dedicated to the memory of Wallenberg. Among them, the International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation , a non-governmental organization which researches Holocaust rescuers and advocates for their recognition, was named in his honor.

  4. List of honours dedicated to Raoul Wallenberg. Marvin Makinen. Raoul Wallenberg Monument, Gothenburg. Nybroplan. O. Iver C. Olsen. Raoul Wallenberg Award. Raoul Wallenberg Holocaust Memorial Park. Raoul Wallenberg International Movement for Humanity.

  5. List of honours dedicated to Raoul Wallenberg (en) owl:sameAs: wikidata:List of honours dedicated to Raoul Wallenberg; https://global.dbpedia.org/id/64H96; prov:wasDerivedFrom: wikipedia-en:List_of_honours_dedicated_to_Raoul_Wallenberg?oldid=1112143031&ns=0; foaf:depiction: wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Raoul_Wallenberg_memorial_stone.jpg

  6. A sculpture just in front of the portrait – the concept of which is the testimony to the repressive nature of history – consists of two sleeping boys. There are many other memorials to Raoul Wallenberg in Sweden and around the world. See also. List of honours dedicated to Raoul Wallenberg; References

  7. The Raoul Wallenberg Award was first given in Hungary in 2010. In 2020 the award was given to six people: Reformed Church pastor Tamás Majsai, historian and journalist Barbara Kaczvinszky, documentary filmmaker Jenő Setét, civil rights activist László Bogdan, Evangelical pastor Gábor Iványi, and church historian János Szigeti.