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Tribute to Portuguese Diplomat Rescuers

Within the cloisters of the Palácio das Necessidades, the headquarters of Portugal’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a discreet commemorative space honors Portuguese diplomats and consular staff who protected and saved lives from Nazi persecution during the Second World War. The memorial is simple and intentional: an olive tree, placed as a symbol of peace, and a plaque dedicated to “diplomats and other officials of Portuguese embassies and consulates” who contributed to the rescue of thousands of people, notably Jews, targeted by the Nazi regime and its allies.

The setting matters. “Necessidades” is not merely a building but a synonym, in Portugal’s political vocabulary, for foreign affairs itself. Installed in a state institution where policy, protocol, and archives converge, the tribute frames rescue not as an isolated act of compassion, but as a form of public responsibility, carried out under pressure, in moments when administrative decisions could become matters of life and death.

The names highlighted by the homage place Portugal within the broader geography of Holocaust-era rescue. Aristides de Sousa Mendes, consul in Bordeaux in 1940, issued visas in defiance of orders, enabling refugees to escape occupied Europe through the Iberian Peninsula. In 1944, in Budapest, Carlos Sampaio Garrido and Alberto de Lis-Teixeira Branquinho operated within a collapsing diplomatic landscape, producing protective documents and facilitating shelter and safe conduct for Jews under threat of deportation and murder. The memorial also extends beyond these individuals, acknowledging that rescue often depended on networks, clerks, and embassy staff, not only on the signatures of senior diplomats.

A central theme of the 2021 ceremony was “reparation.” Sousa Mendes was disciplined and expelled from the diplomatic service under the dictatorship for his actions in 1940, and the long process of restoring his name became part of the memory now inscribed in the ministry’s own walls. By placing this tribute in the Palácio das Necessidades, Portugal symbolically brings these histories back into the institutional home from which some of them were once cast out.

This tribute is integrated into Nunca Esquecer, Portugal’s national programme dedicated to Holocaust memory and human rights. In that framework, remembrance is not treated as distant commemoration, but as civic education: a reminder that the defense of human dignity begins not only in international declarations, but also in everyday public service, in how institutions respond to the vulnerable, the displaced, and the persecuted.

Carlos Sampaio Garrido Memorial

Set beside the busy artery of Avenida Almirante Reis, near the Metro stop Anjos, a discreet plaque at Largo de Santa Bárbara anchors one of Lisbon’s most consequential connections to the history of the Holocaust. The memorial honours Carlos Sampaio Garrido (1883–1960), the Portuguese diplomat who served in Hungary during the war years and is widely credited with helping to save around a thousand Hungarian Jews in 1944, at a moment when deportations and persecution accelerated with brutal speed.

The plaque’s location is not incidental. It stands in the immediate orbit of Rua dos Anjos 79, the headquarters of the Lisbon Regional Council of the Portuguese Bar Association (Ordem dos Advogados), a venue that hosted public commemorations connected to International Holocaust Remembrance Day. In January 2012, these initiatives combined an exhibition, public talks, and the unveiling of this very memorial, weaving together civic space, institutional memory, and the ethical questions raised by rescue, neutrality, and individual responsibility under dictatorship and occupation.

What the monument is

The monument takes the form of a commemorative plaque with a direct, didactic inscription. It identifies Sampaio Garrido as Portugal’s ambassador in Budapest (1939–44), explicitly links him to the title “Righteous Among the Nations,” and frames the tribute as recognition “for saving from death Jews persecuted during the Holocaust.” It is dated to Lisbon, 27 January 2012, marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and includes institutional references associated with Holocaust education and remembrance in Portugal.

This is a memorial designed less for ceremony than for encounter. It is not monumental in scale, but it is unambiguous in message: the city’s streets can also be archives, and a life of moral risk can be made legible in public space without spectacle.

Historical context

Carlos Sampaio Garrido was Portugal’s representative in Hungary during the period when Nazi policy, local collaboration, and wartime chaos converged into mass persecution. In early April 1944, as anti-Jewish measures intensified, he warned Lisbon through diplomatic channels about the degrading and predatory nature of the decrees being imposed on Hungarian Jews. Soon after, amid wartime disruptions and the relocation of some diplomatic missions, he moved the Portuguese legation’s operations and his residence outside Budapest and sheltered a group of Hungarian citizens, most of them Jewish, seeking to protect them from imminent danger.

On 28 April 1944, Hungarian political police raided the ambassador’s residence at dawn. According to testimony cited by Yad Vashem, Garrido physically tried to block the removal of one of the people under his protection, insisting on the inviolability of diplomatic premises. Despite his efforts, the raid proceeded and his “guests” were taken back to Budapest. He continued to press for their release, filed formal complaints, and demanded accountability. In the aftermath, Hungarian authorities declared him persona non grata, and only then did he inform Lisbon of the identities of those he had sheltered.

The scale of rescue associated with Portuguese action in Budapest during 1944 is often discussed as collective and contingent, involving Garrido and other diplomats and officials operating under severe constraints. A Portuguese official publication summarizing these efforts states that the combined action of Sampaio Garrido, Alberto Teixeira Branquinho, and Jules Gulden, with some degree of coverage from the Portuguese government, saved about a thousand Jews.

Recognition and memory in Lisbon

In 2010, Yad Vashem recognized Carlos Sampaio Garrido as Righteous Among the Nations, a designation reserved for non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust without expectation of reward.

Two years later, in January 2012, Lisbon’s local institutions translated that recognition into a public memorial. The Lisbon Regional Council of the Portuguese Bar Association partnered with the local parish authority (at the time, Junta de Freguesia dos Anjos) in a program of events that included the exhibition Vidas Poupadas: A Acção de Três Diplomatas Portugueses na II Guerra Mundial at Rua dos Anjos 79, followed by the unveiling of a plaque in his honour at Largo de Santa Bárbara.

The same commemorative cycle brought together diplomats, elected officials, and civil society figures connected to Holocaust memory in Portugal, indicating how Sampaio Garrido’s story moved from archival and family recollection into a shared public narrative.

Why this place matters in a Jewish heritage itinerary

Lisbon is often remembered as a wartime transit city, but this memorial points to another dimension of the city’s relationship to Jewish history: the diplomatic and bureaucratic channels through which lives could be protected or abandoned. The plaque at Largo de Santa Bárbara condenses that moral geography into a single point. It is a marker of a Portuguese presence inside the Holocaust’s European epicentre, and a reminder that, even within restrictive political systems, individual decisions could open narrow corridors of survival.

In the context of Jewish heritage, this is not a site of medieval continuity or synagogue architecture. It is a site of twentieth-century ethical memory, where the language of civic honour meets the history of rescue, persecution, and the afterlives of testimony.

Aristides Sousa Mendes Memorial

Inside Lisbon’s National Pantheon, the name of Aristides de Sousa Mendes is marked through a commemorative plaque that functions as a symbolic tomb. It is a deliberately sober form of remembrance, integrated into a monument dedicated to honoring Portuguese figures whose lives are understood as part of the country’s civic and moral legacy.

Aristides de Sousa Mendes served as Portugal’s consul in Bordeaux and, in June 1940, as the Nazi advance pushed tens of thousands of refugees toward the last open routes out of France, he issued visas on a massive scale, in direct defiance of restrictive orders from the Salazar regime. Among those who received these documents were many Jews. For countless families, the Portuguese visa was the decisive bridge to Portugal and, from there, to onward escape by sea or air.

The Pantheon tribute acknowledges both the concrete act of rescue and its cost. Sousa Mendes was disciplined, ruined professionally, and marginalized for choosing conscience over obedience. Decades later, international recognition helped reshape his public memory, including his designation by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations. Portugal’s decision to grant him Honours of the National Pantheon formalized that reappraisal at the highest symbolic level, placing his story within Lisbon’s principal architecture of national commemoration.

The memorial can be visited within the Pantheon’s interior spaces, where the plaque anchors an “absent presence”, an empty tomb that insists on the ethical weight of one person’s decision, and links Lisbon’s landscape of memory to the wartime passage of refugees who crossed the city in search of safety.

Vhils WWII Refugee Mural

Vhils’ WWII Refugee Mural in Lisbon was installed in 2023 near the Rocha Conde de Óbidos Maritime Terminal, in connection with the 136th anniversary of the Port of Lisbon and with efforts to recall Lisbon’s role as a point of departure for refugees escaping Europe during the Second World War, many of them Jews.

The mural is based on a wartime photograph by Roger Kahan, a French Jewish refugee and photographer who passed through Lisbon in 1940. Rather than inventing a symbolic image from scratch, Vhils reworked a documented refugee scene connected to the port itself. The image chosen shows a refugee beside a post box before departure, and the mural was placed next to that same surviving post box at Rocha Conde de Óbidos.

Its importance lies in the precision of that connection between image and place. The mural fixes refugee memory in the exact port landscape through which these departures took place, using an image made by someone who was himself part of that history.

Hannah Arendt Memorial

The Hannah Arendt Memorial in Lisbon takes the form of a small ground intervention rather than a conventional monument. Inaugurated on 10 December 2018, International Human Rights Day, it was installed at the corner of Rua da Sociedade Farmacêutica and Rua Conde de Redondo, close to the address most often associated with Arendt’s stay in the city, Rua da Sociedade Farmacêutica 6B. The proposal came from the LIVRE party in the Lisbon Municipal Assembly, was approved unanimously, and was then implemented by the city’s cultural department.

Hannah Arendt in Lisbon

The memorial marks a precise moment in Hannah Arendt’s life. A German Jewish philosopher and refugee from Nazism, she was in Lisbon between January and May 1941, together with her husband Heinrich Blücher and her mother, while waiting for the documents and passage that would allow them to leave for the United States. Her stay lasted about three and a half months, during the period when Lisbon served as one of the main Atlantic routes of escape from occupied Europe.

Form and Location

The memorial is deliberately discreet. Rather than a statue designed to dominate the square, it consists of two inscribed bands set into two low steps in the pavement. One records Arendt’s presence in Lisbon as a refugee from the Nazi regime. The other carries a quotation connected to her reflections on refugees and exile. Its placement at ground level matters because it turns an ordinary street corner into a place of reading and memory without separating it from the city’s daily movement.

Historical Significance

What gives the memorial its force is its precision. It links Hannah Arendt to a specific address, a specific crossing of streets, and a specific historical moment in which refugees in Lisbon waited for visas, ships, and permission to begin again. In this case, the memorial does not monumentalize Arendt in the abstract. It ties her directly to Lisbon’s wartime history as a transit city of exile and escape.

Memorial to the Victims of the 1506 Jewish Massacre

Installed in 2008 in the square facing the Church of São Domingos, this memorial marks the site associated with the outbreak of the Lisbon massacre of April 1506 and stands today as one of the city’s most direct public statements on anti-Jewish violence and the fragility of civic order.

The memorial was created by Graça Bachmann, following suggestions and a proposal connected to the Jewish community, and was inaugurated in a public ceremony that brought together municipal authorities and representatives of different faiths.

Formally, the work is a truncated stone sphere, described in official cultural listings as a “world” cut open, a deliberate image of rupture, violence, and chaos. In the plane of that cut, a Magen David is carved out and filled with an inscription that anchors the memorial in place, time, and meaning.

Inside the Star of David, the Portuguese text remembers “the thousands of Jews” who were victims of intolerance and religious fanaticism, murdered in the massacre that began on 19 April 1506 “in this square”. The dates appear both in the Gregorian calendar (1506–2006) and in the Hebrew years (5266–5766), explicitly linking Lisbon’s local trauma to a Jewish chronology of memory.

At the base, on the rectangular stone plinth supporting the sculpture, a Hebrew inscription quotes the Book of Job, traditionally identified as Job 16:18, a short sentence that refuses erasure: “O earth, do not hide my blood, do not hide my cry.” This detail is crucial because it turns the monument into more than a marker, it makes it a moral demand, inscribed at street level, in a place of daily passage.

The event remembered here began in late April 1506 amid crisis, fear, and religious agitation. Contemporary and later accounts describe how violence spread through the city and targeted the so-called “New Christians”, Jews forcibly converted in Portugal, and those suspected of judaizing. Modern scholarship commonly places the death toll somewhere between roughly 1,000 and 4,000 people.

The memorial also sits within a broader institutional landscape of public memory in this square. Next to it, another monument and related initiatives were presented as gestures of remembrance and reconciliation, showing how Largo de São Domingos has become a concentrated urban site where Lisbon narrates a difficult chapter of its own history.