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Niels Christian Ditleff

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Years active
  
1903–1950

Nationality
  
Norwegian

Name
  
Niels Ditleff


Other names
  
Niels Chr Ditleff

Spouse
  
Hanne Hagerup (m. 1910)

Occupation
  
Diplomat

Niels Christian Ditleff httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
29 October 1881 (
1881-10-29
)
Larvik, Norway

Alma mater
  
Norwegian Naval Academy

Died
  
June 18, 1956, Oslo, Norway

Education
  
Royal Norwegian Naval Academy

Employer
  
Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Cause of death
  
Automobile accident

Resting place
  
Var Frelsers gravlund

Niels Christian Ditleff (29 October 1881 – 18 June 1956) was a Norwegian diplomat noted for his humanitarian efforts on behalf of refugees from Nazi Germany. In spite of opposition from his own and allied governments, he initiated and led the White Buses campaign to rescue Scandinavian prisoners held in German concentration camps. He also played an instrumental role in evacuating foreign diplomats from Warsaw during the German invasion and to rescue Jews in coordination with Nansenhjelpen.

Contents

Biography

Ditleff was born to a maritime family in the port city of Larvik. His father, a sea captain, died when Niels was only three years old. Niels mustered as a sailor in his youth and subsequently was admitted to the Norwegian Naval Academy. He graduated with a commission as a lieutenant but resigned his commission to pursue a career in diplomacy.

He was first stationed in the Norwegian consulate general in Le Havre from 1903 to 1906 and was thereafter sent as vice consul and chargé d'affaires to missions in Havana, Bilbao, and Lisbon before an interval at the ministry offices in Oslo from 1920 to 1926.

He was stationed in Warsaw in 1926, where he rose through the ranks and became ambassador, both to Poland and Czechoslovakia in 1930. He was also accredited to Romania from 1935 to 1937. Although he had to evacuate Warsaw during the German invasion in 1939, he maintained his official role as emissary until the end of the war.

He was stationed as Norway's ambassador to Finland from 1945 to 1950, after which he chose to retire. Ditleff never sought recognition or fame for his contributions.

In addition to his diplomatic career, Ditleff was also an accomplished composer, artist, and playwright. In 1921, he wrote the three-act play Tahove, and another play Statsministeren, which were both shown at Nationaltheatret. He wrote the libretto for the operetta Don Carrambo, set up at Den Nationale Scene in Bergen. In the course of his work, he also developed fluency in Portuguese, Spanish, and Polish, in addition to his working languages of Norwegian, German, and English. He also published newspaper articles and stories, often with his own illustrations.

At a time when this was unusual, he was also an avid recreational runner, known in the city of Warsaw for his daily runs back and forth along the Vistula River, criss-crossing the bridges. His friend Johan Borgen dubbed him "the running diplomat."

He and his wife died in an automobile accident.

World War II

Ditleff's humanitarian contributions during World War II are related to two specific episodes. The evacuation of foreign diplomats and Jews from Warsaw, and the White Buses campaign to rescue Scandinavians held in German concentration camps.

Evacuation from Warsaw

In the spring of 1939, Ditleff set up a transit station in Warsaw for Jewish refugees from Czechoslovakia that had been sent there through the sponsorship of Nansenhjelpen. Ditleff arranged for the refugees to receive food, clothing, and transportation to Gdynia, where they boarded ships bound for Norway.

As German forces approached Warsaw in September 1939, both the Polish government and general staff escaped the city; however, most of the foreign diplomatic corps and other foreign nationals remained. Ditleff, acting as the doyen of the corps, tried early to contact German military authorities to arrange an orderly evacuation with a handheld radio. German airplanes tracked the transmission and strafed the car, but eventually he was able to negotiate a 4-hour cease-fire to arrange the evacuation of 1,200 individuals. They left in a convoy consisting of two trucks and sedans. Ditleff himself drove one car for 48 hours until he fell asleep behind the wheel.

White Buses

Ditleff had returned to Norway by the time Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Norway but was able to escape to Sweden, where he joined the Norwegian legation there.

Ditleff actively opposed the "stay put doctrine" of the Norwegian and Danish governments, advocating instead an active approach to retrieving Norwegian and Danish citizens held in German concentration camps. In November 1944, he proposed a plan to rescue these prisoners and finally prevailed in securing sponsorship for the White Buses operation that rescued tens of thousands of prisoners in the last months of the war. To negotiate the rescue with the German authorities, he enlisted Folke Bernadotte to act under the good offices of the International Red Cross. Bernadotte subsequently initiated contact with Heinrich Himmler to put into effect the plan, which ultimately led to the evacuation of tens of thousands of refugees.

Honours

Ditleff received a large number of Norwegian and foreign orders and decorations, including:

  • Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav (Norway) (12 March 1946, for his work for Norwegian and Danish prisoners in Germany); Knight 1st Class (1927), Commander with Star (1939)
  • Haakon VII's Freedom Cross (Norway)
  • Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog (Denmark)
  • Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose of Finland (Finland)
  • Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta (Poland)
  • Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the Polar Star (Sweden)
  • Order of the Phoenix
  • Order of the White Lion (Czechoslovakia)
  • Order of the Crown of Romania
  • Commander of the Order of Orange-Nassau (Netherlands)
  • Order of Christ (Portugal, 1921 Commander, 1940 Grand Cross)
  • King Christian X's Freedom Award and the Swedish Red Cross' Merit. and Norwegian Red Cross badges of honor.

    References

    Niels Christian Ditleff Wikipedia