Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir...

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Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss

Transcript of Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir...

Page 1: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

Sir Nicholas WintonBy: Jacob Goss

Page 2: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

Sir Nicholas Winton

He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent to concentration camps. This project was named Operation Kindertransport.

Page 3: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

Honored In 1983 on the queens birthday he was appointed apart of the Member of

the Order of the British Empire (MBE). Sir Nicholas Winton was knighted in 2002 for the work he had done. In 2003, Winton received the Pride of Britain Award for Lifetime

Achievement. He was also nominated by the Czech government for the 2008 Nobel Peace

Prize. He also has many statues of his self all around the train station in

Czechoslovakia

Page 4: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

The idea

In December 1938, Martin Blake, a friend and an instructional master at the Westminster School in London, asked Winton to forget his planned skiing vacation and to go with him to Czechoslovakia. Winton went and visited him in Czechoslovakia. This is where he heard about the children and wanted to help.

Page 5: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

Process Independently, Nicholas Winton set up his own rescue operation. At

first, Winton's office was a dining room table at his hotel. Parents came to Winton and placed the future of their children into his hands. An office was set up on Vorsilska Street to accommodate the requests. Thousands of parents heard about this and hundreds of them lined up in front of the new office. Winton's office distributed questionnaires and registered the children to homes.

Winton contacted the governments of nations he thought could take in the children. Only Sweden and Great Britain said yes. Britain promised to accept children under the age of 18 as long as he found homes and supporters who could deposit £50 for each child to pay for their return home.

Page 6: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

The train he missed

Winton arranged for 9 trains to be loaded with the children. 8 trains were successfully loaded with the 669 children. The train he didn’t save, the 9th one, had the most children on it. This is the one transport he remembered most. “The children were on the train waiting to leave to there new homes when Nazi’s came and stopped it.”

Page 7: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

Pictures

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8227798.stm

Page 8: Sir Nicholas Winton By: Jacob Goss. Sir Nicholas Winton He is 103 years old and is still alive. Sir Nicholas Winton saved 669 children from being sent.

“Don’t be content in your life just to do no wrong. Be prepared every day to do good.”

-Sir Nicholas Winton

“Save one life save the world”-Sir Nicholas Winton