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Valentine Holdosi

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This Month In Humane History is a new

www.AnimalPeopleNews.org online feature produced

to promote awareness and appreciation that some

people have always cared enough about animals to

act on their behalf.

 

If any AAPN participant can learn

anything about what became of Valentine Holdosi,

I would be happy to add the afterward to his

story.

 

--\

------------

 

70 years ago, in August 1937

 

15-year old orphan sneaked through enemy lines to save his animals

 

 

 

Among the first, youngest, and least

known heroes of World War II, 15-year-old

Valentine Holdosi may have developed his

extraordinary courage and compassion through his

own harsh experience. Born in Vladivostok to a

Russian mother and Hungarian father, Holdosi was

orphaned at an early age. Another Russian woman

and her husband, a Hungarian musician, took in

young Holdosi.

Fleeing Communist purges, they reached

Shanghai, where they survived in desperate

poverty until the Japanese invasion of July 7,

1937.

Despite the difficulty of the family

circumstances, which were such that Holdosi

suffered from stunted growth due to malnutrition,

they kept pets: Jackie, a German shepherd;

Flock, a setter; a chicken named Murphy; and a

cage of canaries.

Holdosi's story is known from three

sources: the North China Daily News, which

originally reported it; the September 1937

edition of China Journal, which added a photo;

and the November 1937 edition of The National

Humane Review, a news monthly published by the

American Humane Association from 1913 until 1976.

Of the three accounts, the latter is

most complete. Editor Richard Craven, after

receiving a clipping of the North China Daily

News item, wrote to R.N. Swann, then the

director of the Hong Kong SPCA, asking for

verification. Despite the difficulty of

corresponding during wartime, Swann promptly

responded with full particulars and a photograph

similar to the one used by China Journal. Both

photos were apparently taken at the Canidrome

race track in Macao, which then temporarily

housed the Shanghai SPCA.

" With danger in the air and a general

exodus from the area begun, " The National Humane

Review reported, the family " decided to stand by

their home and laid in a month's supply of food.

Then the storm broke and they were

trappedŠPillaging, fire, and murder this boy

saw day after day. "

The Hungarian musician disappeared while

seeking passes that might enable the family to

leave Shanghai. Trying to find him, Holdosi

found and rescued two badly injured Chinese men

instead, brought them home, and--at

considerable personal risk--brought dressings for

them from the only hospital in the area that was

still functioning.

Unfortunately, Japanese troops found the

men, killed them, and torched the neighborhood,

destroying Holdosi's home.

Animals were not spared. On August 15,

1937 a Japanese shell killed 42 of 160 racing

greyhounds who were being evacuated from the

area, along with seven Chinese civilians. But

Holdosi kept his animals safe.

" At night the boy slept on a camp bed in

the garden, " Craven wrote. " The pet chicken and

one dog slept with him. The other dog stayed

with his [adoptive] mother.

" By day the boy wandered through the

streets, releasing deserted dogs who had been

left chained " when their people fled or were

killed.

" At last they determined to make an

effort to get out, " recounted China Journal,

" but not knowing what they would meet on their

perilous journey, they left the two dogs and the

birds in the house, " what was left of it, " with

two day's food supply and plenty of water,

meaning to come back for them if they found it

was possible to get through the zone of

hostilities. "

Holdosi and his adoptive mother on August

26, 1937 reached Frenchtown, a suburb where the

fighting was less intense. There they found the

missing Hungarian musician, and one Inspector

Thomas of the Shanghai SPCA. Thomas

unsuccessfully sought passes that would enable

Holdosi to go back for the animals.

Undaunted, Holdosi made his way back by

a circuitous route that included being captured

at one point and imprisoned in a boiler room,

two and a half miles from the animals. Talking

an Indian watchman into opening the door briefly,

Holdosi bolted, evading Japanese patrols to make

a clean escape.

" When the hero reached his home, " Craven

narrated, " he found the fence had been smashed

down. He raced around to the back. The dogs

recognized his footsteps and set up a great

commotion. They were safe, but he had arrived

only in the nick of time, as some fiend had

covered the dogs with a thick coating of tar and

oil, " apparently meaning to set them ablaze,

along with the building that housed the chicken

and canaries.

" In his happiness at finding the dogs

alive, " Craven related, " Valentine hugged them,

tar and oil spreading all over his clothes,

hands, and face. "

Taking a different route back to

Frenchtown with the animals, Holdosi twice

managed to hitch rides with police officers.

Soldiers helped Holdosi to clean the animals.

From there, the family and their pets made their way to Hong Kong.

Editorialized China Journal, " The

courage, resourcefulness and endurance displayed

by Valentine Holdosi in the course of this

thrilling episode places him amongst the heroes

of the Shanghai War of 1937. "

Asked Craven, " What is the future for

this boy? He deserves a glorious future, and it

is a delight to know from Mr. Swann that friends

of the Society are interesting themselves in his

care. "

Opined Swann, " It seems possible that he

will be properly cared for as soon as conditions

permit. "

Inspector Thomas and friends apparently

kept the Shanghai SPCA alive for at least two

more years under Japanese occupation. In

September 1939, the National Humane Review

reported, the Shanghai SPCA successfully

prosecuted two men for fraud after they were

caught selling dog meat and cat meat as " rabbit. "

The case is of note today because it

indicates that eating dogs and cats was not

societally accepted then, even under wartime

conditions.

Then managing shelters in both Hong Kong

proper and Kowloon, the Hong Kong SPCA was

obliged to suspend operations after Hong Kong

fell to the Japanese invaders in December 1941.

R.N. Swann had by then been recalled to Britain.

His successor, Dorothy Ho Tung, died in 1949,

frustrated by failed attempts to get the Hong

Kong SPCA going again. It finally did revive in

the mid-1950s.

Swann, after military service, returned

to humane work with the Royal SPCA of Great

Britain. Other members of the Swann family also

maintained long involvement with the RSPCA.

But what of Holdosi?

Other than the papers documenting

Holdosi's deeds of July and August 1937, ANIMAL

PEOPLE has found no record of his existence. He

may have been a casualty of the war.

--Merritt Clifton

 

 

--

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent

newspaper providing original investigative

coverage of animal protection worldwide, founded

in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes

the decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal

protection organizations. We have no alignment

or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

 

 

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