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Birstein and Berger, who are based in the U.S., said that though they and other researchers have since been granted access to study some Wallenberg files, important archive material has still not been made available. "At the key junctures, the doors have remained closed," Berger said, noting that even the first piece of material that was handed over by the Russians in 1991, and was meant to illustrate a new openness on their side, turned out to be censored. It concerned interrogation material suggesting that Wallenberg had been questioned six days after his alleged death. Russia has never been able to produce a reliable death certificate or hand over Wallenberg's remains
-- circumstances which have prompted researchers to try to continue to try to tap Russian authorities for more information. As Sweden's envoy in Budapest from July 1944, Wallenberg saved 20,000 Jews by giving them Swedish travel documents or moving them to safe houses, and dissuaded German officers from massacring the 70,000 inhabitants of the city's ghetto. Sweden marks the 100th anniversary of his birth this year with a series of events, including a traveling exhibition, seminars, conferences, concerts and a commemorative stamp. ___ Online: http://www.raoul-wallenberg.eu/
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