Luiz Martins de Souza Dantas was serving as the Brazilian ambassador to France and to the
Vichy Government during the German occupation. Despite complaints and investigations into his activities by other Brazilian diplomats, as well as the tightening of Brazilian immigration laws regarding Jewish immigration, he was motivated by "a Christian feeling of mercy" to save hundreds from persecution by the Nazis by issuing diplomatic
travel visas for entry into Brazil. After being ordered to stop issuing these visas, he would often forge the issue date to a date prior to the order. He would also remove any mention of Jewish ancestry from the applicant's history. Unlike other diplomats at the time, Souza Dantas did not grant visas for personal gain or to a select group. In a 1942 letter to Brazil's foreign minister
Osvaldo Aranha, he said the camps set up by the Nazis were like something out of ''
Dante's Inferno'', where Jews were either slaves or were exterminated. Among those he helped save were the 12-year-old
Felix G. Rohatyn, a future investment banker, and the Rohatyn family. An investigation was opened by the administrative department of the public service in charge of Ambassador Dantas. He was accused of granting irregular visas. In an Itamaraty telegram, Souza Dantas affirmed in his defense that after the prohibition he did not grant "even a visa". It was a lie. Chana Strozemberg, a woman from Poland, obtained a visa issued in January 1941, a month after the prohibition, but with false information. Eventually the investigation and suspicions of Luiz Martins de Souza Dantas were enough for him to be recalled by
Getúlio Vargas, the Brazilian President of the time, where he faced disciplinary hearing for his actions. He was found guilty of breaking the Brazilian Jewish immigration policy. He was able to escape punishment since he was technically retired and only working for the government on special request. After the war he returned to Paris, where he died in obscurity on 14 April 1954. He married a Jewish woman from San Francisco, Elise Meyer Stern, daughter of
Eugene Meyer and widow of Abraham Stern, who had been secretary of
Levi Strauss & Co. == References ==