WASHINGTON - In a moving ceremony attended by family and
friends, two of UUSC’s founders who left their family,
church, and community to help rescue victims of Nazi
persecution were memorialized on
Thursday at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. The
event served as a celebration of the legacy of the late
Martha and Waitstill Sharp as well as a call to action for
today's "righteous" to challenge the genocide taking place
in Darfur.
The Rev. Waitstill Sharp, a Unitarian minister, and his wife
Martha, who left their family, church, and community to help
rescue victims of Nazi persecution, became only the second
and third Americans to be enshrined with a plaque on the
museum's Wall of Rescuers. Martha Sharp is the first
American woman.
Representatives from UUSC, the Holocaust museum and the U.S.
Congress praised the Sharps for their heroism, and said the
real significance of their legacy is how it inspires us
today to challenge modern-day genocide.
Congress pays tribute to Sharps
"We must also commend the Unitarian Universalist Service
Committee as they carry forward the torch of the Sharps with
the people of Darfur," said Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island,
who sponsored
a Senate Resolution that was passed last week to pay tribute to
Sharps and their legacy.
The Rev. William F. Schulz, chair of UUSC's Board of
Trustees, pointed out that the remarkable accomplishments of
the Sharps were made possible by a larger circle of friends,
colleagues, and institutions.
"Not every one of us can visit the refugee camps of Darfur
or the U.S. detention camps in Iraq or Afghanistan or God
knows where else." said Schulz. "But every one on us can be
a part of the lives of those who do. Every one of us can be
part of institutions that make such heroism possible and in
that measure can claim a degree of kinship with the
righteous among the nations."
Holocaust survivor cites Darfur genocide
Holocaust survivor, Rosemarie Feigl, now 80 and living in
New York City, is one of the hundreds of people the Sharps
helped to escape Nazi tyranny and settle in the United
States. She had planned to speak at the ceremony in
Washington, but was advised by her doctor not to travel due
to a recent medical problem.
UUSC President Charlie Clements told the guests at the
ceremony that Feigl, though unable to travel to Washington,
insists on participating in the
Rally to Save Darfur on
Sunday, September 17 in New York's Central Park. "If the
Sharps could do what they did, then I can go to the rally
Sunday," he quoted Feigl as saying.

The extraordinary work of the Sharps in rescuing hundreds of
Jews and others persecuted by the Nazis led to the founding
of what is today the Unitarian Universalist Service
Committee, which has lived out the couple's legacy for more
than 65 years by challenging genocide, including the
atrocities happening in Darfur.
"Few people found it within themselves to risk danger by
helping their neighbors during the Holocaust," said Sara J.
Bloomfield, director of the Holocaust museum. "That the
Sharps were willing to leave the safety of the United States
to save strangers in Europe speaks to their character, and
serves as an inspiration to us today, particularly as we
continue to witness atrocities in Darfur and elsewhere."
The resolution passed by the Senate pays tribute to the
courageous work of the Sharps, celebrating them as "genuine
American heroes." In addition to Reed, the resolution is
cosponsored by Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, and John
F. Kerry and Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Martha
Sharp is a native of Rhode Island and a graduate of Brown
University. Waitstill Sharp is a Massachusetts native and a
graduate of Harvard University Law School.
"We are proud to celebrate the heroism of the Sharps” said
UUSC President Charlie Clements. "Their work continues to
inspire us, and we intend to redirect people's attention to
the slow genocide in Darfur today. We want to inspire
activism by asking: How will our grandchildren celebrate our
righteousness in regard to the inhumanity that occurs on our
watch."
The recognition by the museum follows a ceremony on June 13
when the Sharps were honored as Righteous Among the Nations
by the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Israel. More than
21,000 have been so honored since the memorial was
established in 1963, the vast majority from European
countries.