After 42 years as a lawyer in practice in Jerusalem, I decided I wanted to try retirement. As it happened, “retirement” lasted only six years, and I went back to my practice. In those retirement years, while looking for voluntary work that would suit me, I ventured into the Central Zionist Archives in Jerusalem, which was looking for people of my ilk.

Being an English speaker by education, I was offered a “collection” of over 25,000 documents, mostly in English, which had been amassed by one J. Louis Cohen, whom I had never heard of. I accepted the task, and over the following year I did indeed peruse and catalogue all those many documents.

I mostly did so with my mouth agape because unfolding before my eyes was an incredible story of courage and determination of the partners and staff of Marks & Spencer, who had played a central and organizing role in the rescue and rehabilitation of the desperate, persecuted Jews of Europe in the years leading up to World War II. 

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