Abdul-Wahab, the son of a wealthy aristocratic family, had frequently travelled abroad during his youth, mostly to
France. Before the war he had studied art and architecture in
New York. He was 31 when German troops occupied Vichy Tunisia in November 1942.
French Tunisia was then home to approximately 100,000
Jews. Under the Nazis'
anti-Semitic policies, they were forced to wear
yellow badges and were subject to fines and having their property confiscated. More than 5,000
Tunisian Jews were sent to forced
labor camps, where 46 are known to have died. Another 160
Tunisian Jews in
France were sent to European
death camps. Abdul-Wahab, acting as an
interlocutor between the Nazis and the population of the coastal town of
Mahdia, heard that German officers were planning to rape a local Jewish woman, whom he realized must be Odette Boukris, the wife of an acquaintance. He plied the German with wine until the German was drunk and drove to the oil factory where the family had taken refuge, and picked up the Boukris family and their neighbours, the Ouzzan family, 25 people, and took them to his family's farm, and kept them there for 4 months, allocating a small room to each family member. Despite the contiguity of Khaled's farm to a
Red Cross camp where injured German soldiers were tended, none of the farm-hands, who knew of the presence of these hidden Jews, revealed the fact. They stayed until the Nazi occupation ended, and in April 1943, with the
arrival of the British at Mahdia, all the families returned to their homes. In December 1942, he helped save a Jewish family of nearly two dozen people. One of them was Eva Boukris, 13 years old at the time. All able-bodied men of Boukris' family were ordered into forced labour by the Germans. The family was offered protection by Khaled who ferried all the women, children and old men to his farm. The family was provided lodging by Khaled in the stables of his farm. Soon after a German unit arrived in the area. Khaled instructed the family to hide their yellow badges, stay in the courtyard and keep away from the main house. In order to keep the family hidden, he invited the German unit to his house. By the night, two drunk German soldiers wandered to the courtyard. They started banging on the door of the courtyard saying, "We know you're Jews and we're coming to get you!" The family upon hearing these threats hid all the girls. Khaled reached there and managed to convince the Germans to leave the family alone. Next day he apologised to the family for the threats by the German soldiers and promised them that such an incident would never happen again. Eva and her family passed the rest of the German occupation on his farm. =="Righteous Among the Nations" ==