“Thank you, Sir Nicholas Winton, we will never forget. RIP,” wrote the Slovak President Andrej Kiska on his tweeter webpage citing his often-repeated motto: “If it’s not impossible, there must be a way to do it.”
Winton, also known as the ‘British Schindler’, was born to parents of Jewish-German origin in the UK. He studied banking in the UK, France and Germany, and after returning home he started working in a British-Czech bank. Before the war, he served in the Royal Air Force and was also active in the Red Cross.
In 1939, shortly before the war began, Winton and his collaborators sent 669 children from mainly Jewish families from Prague to Great Britain on several trains. Some of them lost their biological parents for good but started a new life in the UK. Thus, he saved their lives.
He planned another transport of Czechoslovak children, but after Germany attacked Poland on September 1, 1939, and the borders were closed, this was no longer possible. The declaration of war meant an end to the children’s transports.
In March 2003, Queen Elisabeth II lent Winton the Order of the British Empire, thus making him a Sir, the TASR newswire wrote.
Slovak film director Matej Mináč has directed three films related to his activities including the drama All My Loved Ones (1999) and the documentary The Power of Good: Nicholas Winton (2002), which won an Emmy Award.
In 2011, he directed the documentary film Nicky’s Family (Nickyho rodina) following the life stories of the children who were saved. Some of them also came from Slovakia. The film project that was made in cooperation with Czech and Slovak public-service televisions has received around 40 awards.