FRANK FOLEY - THE QUIET BRITON Frank Foley is finally getting the recognition he deserves Despite being described as "a true British hero", by Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, the role Frank Foley played in helping thousands of Jews to escape from Nazi Germany has remained largely unrecognised even in his home town. But all that looks set to change. Inside Out celebrates this true hero and the lives his bravery helped to save. Born in Highbridge, Somerset, in 1884, Frank Foley, a quiet and unassuming man, was an MI6 agent based at the British Embassy in Berlin during the 1930s. Witnessing Hitler's ruthless rise to power, he was well aware of the fate that lay ahead for Jewish people. Working as a passport control officer as cover for his intelligence work, Frank Foley used his position to provide papers for Jewish people. He not only interpreted the rules on visas loosely, enabling Jews to escape to Britain and Palestine, but he also helped to forge passports, and even sheltered people in his own home. At great personal risk, Frank Foley's bravery and compassion saved thousands of lives and some even believe the figure could run into tens of thousands. A hero uncovered Michael Smith travelled to Berlin to pay tribute to Frank Foley's life Journalist Michael Smith first uncovered Frank Foley's incredible story after being tipped-off by one of his MI6 contacts. He has now made it his personal mission to ensure this modest man finally gets the recognition he deserves. "He was very moralistic. He'd been brought up a Catholic by his mother and studied to be a priest," says Michael. "To him the whole Hitler regime was anathema - he said it was the rule of the devil on earth". Unsung hero Whilst Oskar Schindler's efforts in saving thousands of Jews were immortalised in the book Schindler's Ark by Thomas Keneally and the film Schindler's List by Steven Spielberg, Frank Foley's bravery has gone largely unnoticed. Michael Smith, Defence Correspondent at the Daily Telegraph and author of a book about Frank Foley, suggests that this is due, in part, to the limited number of Jews he was able to help at any one time. Schindler was a factory owner, employing and thereby saving the lives of 1,400 Jews who would ordinarily have been sent to the concentration camps. This quiet and modest man was Britain's top spy in Berlin Many of the Jews Schindler saved remained in contact after fleeing Germany, thus giving a voice to his story. In contrast, many of the thousands helped to safety with forged visas supplied by Frank Foley, were unaware of the identity of their life saving benefactor. Many Jews would arrive in Palestine with visas they knew they shouldn't have, so understandably kept this information quiet. In honour In November 2004, a plaque was placed outside the British Embassy in Berlin to pay tribute to Frank Foley's remarkable courage. This was the first time that the British government has officially recognised Frank Foley's bravery, but Michael would still like to see him achieve national recognition in the UK. He says, "he was an amazing man with no apparent regard for the danger, saving lots of Jewish lives. "I think he should be a national hero". Frank Foley's efforts have already been recognised by Israel, which declared him a righteous gentile, like Oskar Schindler. The statue celebrates Frank Foley and his home town Highbridge Back in Highbridge, the local council have honoured his memory with a new road, whilst the Foley Committee have erected a plaque on the house where he was born. "I think he was almost an embarrassment to the establishment and the government," says one committee member. "He was doing it with his own religiously driven agenda. He went out on a limb - that's what I admire about him". Unimpressed with the road which currently remains unfinished, the committee, through coffee mornings and donations, has raised over £20,000 to commission a statue in honour of his memory. "We're very, very proud of him," explains Foley Committee member Joyce. "We really want to make this something to put Highbridge on the map, because he really was such a brave man". The statue is due to be unveiled in May 2005. Now 47 years after his death in 1958, the man whose life as an intelligence officer depended on anonymity, in his home town at least, is finally getting the recognition he deserves.