S-4868-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Adam Schiff (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would award a single Congressional Gold Medal, collectively, to Americans who rescued or aided Jews and other refugees during the Nazi Holocaust between 1933 and 1945. The Secretary of the Treasury would design and strike the medal, which would then be permanently housed at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for display and research. The bill also authorizes the Mint to produce and sell bronze duplicate medals at cost-recovery prices, with proceeds deposited into the U.S. Mint Public Enterprise Fund.
Who benefits
Descendants and families of American Holocaust rescuers, who would receive formal national recognition of their relatives' actions. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, which would receive and display the medal. Educators, researchers, and historians focused on Holocaust history. Jewish American communities and Holocaust survivor communities and their descendants. The broader public, which gains a commemorative artifact tied to Holocaust remembrance.
Who is hurt
There are no direct negative effects on any identifiable group. The U.S. Mint Public Enterprise Fund bears the production cost of the gold medal, though the bill authorizes bronze duplicate sales to offset expenses. Taxpayers bear any net cost not recovered through duplicate medal sales, though that amount would be minimal.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that American rescuers operated at great personal risk — including arrest, imprisonment, and death — in the face of domestic public opposition and congressional inaction, such as the 1939 rejection of asylum for 20,000 Jewish children and the turning away of the S.S. St. Louis. They contend that formal recognition is long overdue and that honoring these individuals preserves a critical historical record of American moral courage during one of history's worst atrocities.
Opponents argue
Opponents might argue that the bill's collective, single-medal approach is too broad and insufficiently specific to meaningfully honor individual rescuers, potentially diluting the recognition given to those who took the greatest personal risks. They could also contend that Congress has awarded hundreds of Congressional Gold Medals in recent decades, raising questions about whether the honor retains its distinction when applied collectively to an undefined group rather than to named individuals or specific organizations.