Obama to award Medal of Honor to Jewish World War I hero
Published May 15, 2015
(JTA)— A Jewish World War I veteran will be posthumously awarded the nation’s highest military honor 97 years after his heroic actions against the Germans. The White House announced Thursday that Sgt. William Shemin, who is Jewish and died in 1973, will be awarded the Medal of Honor in a ceremony on June 2. Shemin’s daughter Elsie Shemin-Roth will accept the award for her father, the Associated Press reported. Shemin-Roth, now 85, from suburban St. Louis, Missouri, sought to have her father included under a law that mandated a review of troops who may have been denied the highest service medal because of discrimination. Last year, President Barack Obama awarded the medal to a number of soldiers believed to have faced discrimination, but Shemin was not considered because the law did not extend back to World War I. At age 19, on a French battlefield in 1918, Shemin crossed through gunfire three times to pull comrades to safety, taking a bullet in his head. He had been awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the second highest honor, although at least one of his superiors had recommended the Medal of Honor. Shemin-Roth believes her father was denied the highest honor because of anti-Semitism. African-American soldier Henry Johnson also will receive the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions in 1918 against the Germans. Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed