Tom Lantos’s mother was one of 440,000 Hungarian Jews killed by the Nazis. Lantos joined the anti-Nazi underground and survived. But when he learned of her death, he was not embittered. He remained positive with an engaging personality, enabling him to befriend people of all backgrounds and views. “[Lantos],” remarked his friend Elie Wiesel, “saw his survival from the camps in Europe as a reason to devote his life to help victims of discrimination, oppression and persecution everywhere.”
Born and raised in Budapest, Lantos came to the United States following the war. Quickly becoming fluent in English, Lantos excelled academically, ultimately receiving a doctorate in economics from Berkeley. He kept his old world courtliness and never had a desk in his office, not wishing anything to come between him and his visitors.
Lantos led a distinguished career as a Democratic Congressman from California, eventually becoming Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. His twenty-seven year service was characterized by a commitment to safeguarding human rights, and to defending the Jewish people and the Jewish state.
As the only Holocaust survivor elected to Congress, his first act was to introduce legislation to honor Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who rescued thousands of Hungarian Jews during World War II. Lantos then became actively engaged in the cause of Soviet Jewry and organized the Congressional Human Rights Commission, a group since renamed in his honor, to assist those fighting for freedom and expose the atrocities of their foes. The 2004 law named after him—the Lantos Amendment—is the one which requires the U.S. State Department to regularly report on antisemitism as a worldwide phenomenon and threat.
When it came to Israel, the view of Tom Lantos carried great weight in Congress. When countries in the Middle East threatened Israel, Tom Lantos always spoke out. When he felt that Egypt’s government was not doing enough to stop the smuggling of weapons to Hamas, he suggested ending aid to Egypt and he questioned funding to Lebanon, noting that its unwillingness to defend its borders allows Syria and Iran to finance, arm and train Hezbollah.
One of his colleagues, Democratic Senator and Vice Presidential candidate Joe Lieberman said: “[Tom Lantos] embodied the bipartisan support that Israel so rightly enjoys in America. In the history of the Jewish state, Israel had no better friend in Congress.”