This is an iHeart Podcast. Hey, what's up? It's Mario Lopez. Back to schools, an exciting time, but it can also be overwhelming, and kids may feel isolated. A vulnerability that human traffickers can exploit.
Human trafficking doesn't always look like what you expect. Everyday moments can become opportunities for someone with bad intentions, whether you're a parent, teacher, coach, or neighbor. Check in. Ask questions. Stay connected.
Blue Campaign is a national awareness initiative that provides resources to help recognize suspected instances of human trafficking. Learn the signs and how to report at dhs.gov/slash blue campaign. I'm Scott Hanson, host of NFL Red Zone. Lowe's knows Sundays hit different when you earn them. We've got you covered with outdoor power equipment from Cobalt and everything you need to weatherproof your deck with Trex decking.
Plus, with lawn care from Scotts and of course, pit boss grills and accessories, you can get a home field advantage all season long.
So get to Lowe's, get it done, and earn your Sunday. Lowe's, official partner of the NFL. Welcome to the W, where legends are made and history is written under the brightest lights. The WNBA delivers non-stop action and world-class talent every single game. And now, it all comes down to this.
Who will win it all this season? This is where champions rise and legacies are defined. Watch the WNBA Finals currently underway on ABC and ESPN. Take a deep dive into the stories making the news headlines across the world. The News Agents.
We're not just here to tell you what's happening, but why. From me, Emily Maitless. And me, John Sopol. With Global's award-winning podcast, the News Agents dropping daily, covering everything you need to know about politics and current affairs. And the News Agents USA.
Listening to the news agents on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Open your free iHeart app and search the news agents to start listening. In the heat of battle, your squad relies on you. Don't let them down. Unlock Elite Gaming Tech at Lenovo.com.
Dominate every match with next-level speed, seamless streaming, and performance that won't quit so you can push your gameplay beyond performance with Intel Core Ultra processors for the next era of gaming. Upgrade to smooth, high-quality streaming with Intel Wi-Fi 6E and maximize game performance with enhanced overclocking. Win the tech search. Power up at lenovo.com. Melville.
This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories. Over 20,000 people worldwide have been awarded the prestigious honor of being righteous among nations by Yad Veshem. That's the official Holocaust Museum of Israel. and all of them risked their lives during the Holocaust to save Jews. despite not being Jewish themselves.
but only seven Americans have been honored with this award. One of them is Master Sergeant Roddy Edmonds. Here to tell the story of his father is Christopher Edmonds, author of No Surrender. Let's get into the story. Take it away, Chris.
Well, my daughters, Kristen and Lauren, were attending Marival College, and they're going to be educators, which they are. I'm very proud of them. They were in a history class. The professor gave the whole class, do a history project, pick a family member who's had some connection with history. And we want you to do a presentation.
You can use a variety of different tools for that. They chose. Dad, because he was a POW in World War II. And so she came home very excited about it. She said, Dad, the professor gave us permission.
She said, We were supposed to interview someone who's living, but dad passed away the year I was born. And we get to do that. And I said, well, that's exciting. I'm excited for you.
So let's. Let's get his journals. He kept two journals as a POW in World War II. Journals that he kept tucked away, that he never talked about, never brought them out, never showed them to anybody. When you'd say, Dad, What what happened over there?
So then I'd rather not say. And then you'd press him on it. When I was in college, I was pressing him on it because I was reading the diaries and I said. Dad, I want to know. And he goes, So under some things just Too difficult to talk about.
He said, I'll just tell you this, the Germans humiliated us. And that's all he would say. And he was a person who liked to talk. And so she does the project. They put a video together, just use pictures off the internet, but the narration.
are words from his diary. And when I watched that, it was like God said, You gotta go find out. I felt a sense of calling, just like I did when I was called to the ministry. It was a burden, it was a passion. And so One night.
I just typed in his rank and his name, Master Sergeant Roddy Edmonds. and the first link that appeared. was a New York Times article, and Dad's name was highlighted in that article. Title the article article was Richard Nixon's Search for a New York Home. It's an article written by the editor of the New York Times in 2008 looking back to 1980.
And the whole desire for the president, who had stepped down from the presidency at the time, was wanting to move to New York. try to rehabilitate his career and No one wanted him as their neighbor. They all blackballed him and said, No, he's not moving in beside me. Except for a gentleman by the name of Lester Tanner. who was a prominent New York attorney.
He lived in a very prominent section of New York. His neighbors were Schlesinger and Rockefeller. And he reached out to the president. Long story short, is in that article, the editor pressed Lester on his life before he met the president. And Lester just said, Well, I was in World War II, and I was a staff sergeant in the 106th Infantry, and I was captured during the Battle of the Bulge.
So they talked about that. And he said, Lester said, right in the middle of it, he said, This has been on my heart for years, but never really said anything to my family. He said, I just blurted out. He said, Had it not been for the bravery of my Master Sergeant Roddy Edmonds. who saved my life.
I wouldn't have met the President. I'm stunned. I've got to meet Lester now. What is Lester talking about? Dad never mentioned this.
He never shared it with my mom. Never shared it with us. It's not in his diary in clear verse. It's it's There's cryptic notes in Dad's diary. Clues to what I've discovered.
For instance, he's got a little dash in his diary that says dogs. He's also got a dash that says, Jewish friends moved out. That happened in the first POW camp he was in. where they segregated the Jewish men. And ultimately, many of those men were sent to their death.
in a concentration camp where they were forced labor. really, really killed them. And then he's also got a little dash mark that says before the commander. I now know what that. It's a it's a horrible experience, but I know what that means now.
I say dad didn't have a lot of things, but he had the right things. He was born in 1919, just there in the hills of East Tennessee. He grew up in a community called South Knoxville. You know, he he had tragedy from the very beginning of of his life. His father, my grandfather, TC, was a professional paper hanger and a hard worker.
And my dad's mom, Jenny, was a homemaker, but she died when he was three years old and age 10. the depression hit. but yet he endured that. Like those in our greatest generation, they learned how to adapt and survive. And um He was pretty simple about his faith.
He said, There is a God. He is good. Therefore, I must be good as well. And um in 1940, September of 1940. He heard a speech by President Roosevelt, who came to dedicate the Smoky Mountain National Park.
I think it stirred his heart. Um And he left his his high school sweetheart. And he joined the army. He started training as a private, and within two, before two years had passed, he was a master sergeant.
Now that's incredible. At the time he was the youngest master sergeant appointed. in the U. S. Army.
Uh he was age twenty two. Obviously, he had great leadership skills. He cared about people, but he also demanded. You know, he he was tough on 'em. But he was tough in a in a fair way.
And in a kind way. He also didn't expect any of his soldiers to do anything he wouldn't choose to do. I mean, he would always march with them. If they had to sleep out in the mud, he's sleeping with them. He taught them to love their rifles and to learn how to survive.
But they were the youngest group of soldiers and the greenest group of soldiers, but yet they were also very, very bright.
So Henry Kissinger was a part of that group. Bob Doyle was a part of that group. Facing the brief but furious German counteroffensive in Belgium. American engineers string barbed wire barricades in bitter winter weather. Snow has no beauty on a war front for the men who must do the fighting.
It's the largest and bloodiest battle of World War II. I mean, Hitler hit them with everything they had. In Dad's Diary, he writes: you know, rifles are no good against tanks in 88 fire. But they fought valiantly, they held them off, and they actually delayed the success of the Germans enough to where the Americans ultimately won that battle about 30 days later. But dad was captured along with the rest of his men.
They were marched several days without food and water. Skip Friedman, one of my POW friends. He said, if you didn't march, you didn't last. He said we could hear shots in the back. And so they were marched to a train station, put on trains, taken deeper into Germany, another four or five days on trains without food and water, standing room only, the same cattle cars that they were using to take Jewish people to their death.
And they ultimately arrived after a a terrifying bombing where they were marshalled over onto a sidecar in Lindbergh Cranyard and that morning the the weather had cleared and so the British came over to bomb that train yard and the POWs were also mixed in with armament, German armament. And The British did a great job of blowing that place up, and they also killed quite a few American soldiers as a result of that. And so they had to hear all those bombs falling. Toward them with no place to run. And that was probably one of the most frightening experiences that the men.
endured during their time. Every one of the POWs I've met with They almost make a B line to that moment. and talk about The terror. that they had. But yet in that boxcar, the dad's boxcar, I've Met a POW who was there, Hank Friedman.
He said, um. We all were trying to kill each other to get out of that boxcar. We all wanted to escape and get away from those bombs because we could hear everyone coming right at us. He said it was pandemonium, it was crazy, it was terrifying. He said, But didn't I hear the voice?
With a southern drawl, rise up above the clamor on the other side of the box car, he says, It's your father. He said it's my sergeant. He says, Ah, boys, Have you ever prayed to God? You need to pray. Pray, boys, pray our God will save us.
He said our box car got quiet. And we began to pray. He said, I'd never really prayed that much before. He said, I grew up Jewish. I was a Jewish kid.
He said, I knew God, but I. We all prayed. He said, and then your father voiced a prayer. Above The silence. He said, your father's faith was the first seed of faith.
that I ever experienced. as a Jewish kid. He said, which uh God brought to fruition when I was 80 years old at Shadowbrook Baptist Church. He said, I came to. To my Messiah.
And he said that's what What uh won the day. More of this story here on Our American Story. Time for a sofa upgrade? Visit washable sofas.com and discover Anibay, where designer style meets budget-friendly prices, with sofas starting at $699. Anibay brings you the ultimate in furniture innovation with a modular design that allows you to rearrange your space effortlessly.
Perfect for both small and large spaces, Anibay is the only machine-washable sofa inside and out. Say goodbye to stains and messes with liquid and stain-resistant fabrics that make cleaning easy. Liquid simply slides right off. Designed for custom comfort, our high-resilience foam lets you choose between a sink-in feel or a supportive memory foam blend. Plus, our pet-friendly stain-resistant fabrics ensure your sofa stays beautiful for years.
Don't compromise quality for price. Visit washable sofas.com to upgrade your living space today with no risk returns and a 30-day money-back guarantee. Get up to 60% off plus free shipping and free returns. Shop now at washable sofas.com. Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply.
Mm-hmm. Hey, what's up, it's Marla Lopez. Back to schools, an exciting time, but it can also be overwhelming and kids may feel isolated, a vulnerability that human traffickers can exploit. Human trafficking doesn't always look like what you expect. Everyday moments can become opportunities for someone with bad intentions, whether you're a parent, teacher, coach, or neighbor.
Check in. Ask questions. Stay connected. Blue Campaign is a national awareness initiative that provides resources to help recognize suspected instances of human trafficking. Learn the signs and how to report at dhs.gov/slash blue campaign.
The Chase Inc. Business Premiere Card is made for people who make things happen, like me. I'm Sam, founder and CEO of Manifest, a product design company that makes everyday products design smarter. I get 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more, plus unlimited 2% cash back on all other purchases, which helps us make more smart ideas into a brilliant reality. The Inc.
Business Premier Card. Chase your business, make more of what's yours. Real business owner compensated for their participation. Cards issued by JP Morgan Chase Bank and MMR FDIC subject to credit approval. Terms apply.
Welcome to the W, where legends are made and history is written under the brightest lights. The WNBA delivers non-stop action and world-class talent every single game. And now, it all comes down to this: who will win it all this season? This is where champions rise and legacies are defined. Watch the WNBA Finals currently underway on ABC and ESPN.
Take a deep dive into the stories making the news headlines across the world. The news agents. We're not just here to tell you what's happening, but why. From me, Emily Maitless. And me, John Sopol.
With Global's award-winning podcast, the news agents dropping daily, covering everything you need to know about politics and current affairs. And the News Agents USA. Listening to the news agents on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Open your free iHeart app and search the news agents to start listening. And we return to our American stories, and with Chris Edmonds sharing the story of his father.
Master Sergeant Roddy Edmonds. one of seven Americans to be awarded the prestigious honor. of being considered Righteous among nations. by Israel's official Holocaust Museum. Let's return to the story.
The second camp that dad was transferred to. Dad is the highest ranking soldier among them. And so he's their leader. But they marched them in on on uh January 25th. and make them stand out in the cold all day long to intimidate them with with with the guard dogs and and uh they rifle butt several of them uh just uh if they're not standing up straight or they're just very cruel to them.
But they wanted to intimidate them and let them know who was in charge. They march a young Russian soldier out in front of the Americans. They tell the young Russian he's free to go. They opened the gates. The Russian hesitates, obviously.
Now, this young Russian is gaunt, he's emaciated, he's been starved to death, worked to death. But yet there's the sense of freedom. And so he begins to start walking towards the the gate. They go at him some more and he starts running towards the gate and just as he gets to the gate the commandant signals with his head and they close the gates and they release the dogs. and the Americans are forced to watch that young Russian soldier being mauled to death.
The Americans obviously don't want to watch it, but the guards are smashing them with the rifles, forcing them to watch. And then the Commandant comes to my father and he said, If you or any of your men disobey us, this will happen to you. And so That's how their experience at Ziegenhain started. And they finally take them to barracks to get them settled in into the barracks. And every morning they have to fall out for a headcount.
They send orders to my father, and they announce over the American loudspeakers that the following morning they want only the Jewish men to fall out. Just the juice. Anyone who disobeys this order will be shot.
So they issue those orders and and Lester Tanner, who says, I'm in your father's barracks and said as immediately as he got those orders, he turned to all of us in our barracks. There's probably 250 of us in that barracks. There's five other American barracks. He turns to us and he says, men, we're not doing that. Tomorrow morning we all fall out.
Send orders to the other barracks leaders. That's what we're going to do. And then he calls a beating with the barracks leaders, and he issues the orders again. He says, Man, we've got to stand together. We've got to have every man out there.
Even if he said, I know there's some men who do. physically. It's going to be hard for them to get out there because they've already been 40 days into starvation. at this point. And so uh It gets commitment from all the barracks leaders, and they go back and they get commitment for all the men.
Which is absolutely amazing. You know, any one of those men Could have said, I'm not going out there.
Well, the next day, it's bright and early. It's dawn, and all the Americans are standing out there together as one. and the commandant, comes out. It's not the commandant who comes over to my father. It's a major.
And Major Ziegman.
Now, Major Ziegman had been in the first camp they were in and had taken Jews away from that camp. Uh he's He's from high command in Berlin. He's two people away from Hitler. He's the eyes and ears of Hitler in the POW camps. And uh He's there.
For one reason, one reason only. He's there to get the Jewish men. and when he steps out of the headquarters, and sees All of the Americans. He is furious. His orders have been disobeyed.
And so he storms over to my father. He gets up into his face, and he said. Were my orders not clear? Did you not understand? My dad said.
Major. All that's required by the Geneva Convention is name, rank, and serial number. And the major interrupts him and says, listen, Sergeant. You don't understand. My orders were just for the Jews.
Only the Jews. You can't all be Jews. And um My father said, we are all Jews here. The Major turned blood red. and became vicious and and furious, he pulled his gun.
He pressed it. hard in my dad's forehead. And he screamed, Sergeant, One last chance. You will order the Jewish men to step forward. or I will shoot you right now.
Leicester said uh Your dad was so brave. He said, I had no idea what he was going to do or what he was going to say, but he said, I just. I couldn't believe it. He said, the time froze. We didn't know what was going to happen.
He said, We were all scared to death. We didn't know what was going to happen, but we all stayed. He said, Your father was unwavering. It made us brave. We all stood together.
He said, and finally, Uh your father spoke. And he said, and your father spoke truth. He said. Major. You can shoot me.
But you'll have to kill all of us. Because we know who you are. And you'll stand for war crimes when we win this war. And you will pay. Lester said.
I couldn't believe your father. How strong he was, and how I mean, he spoke. the truth he said the Major turned white immediately. turned white, and his arm began to shake. He said, I don't think anyone had ever stood up to him.
He said, I really believe the truth. sunk into uh that old majors. heart and his soul. And almost as immediately as he'd pulled the gun, he he pulled. the gun to his side, stuck it in his holster, and he Swung around and marched back to his headquarters.
And he said, And we never saw Major Ziegman again. I don't know if Dad had ever met a Jewish person until he'd got into the service. But to dad, people were people. People were God's creation. And everyone was made equally in the sight of God, and everybody mattered.
And so it didn't matter what your faith was or what your beliefs were, what background you came from. There were boys from every nook and cranny of this country who were serving. And dad was real. He was the real, he was the real sincere. Christian.
Uh I I kinda uh I think of Paul Stern. Paul said for for a a person who had no reason to do what they did to stand up for us. He said To me. That's a real Christian, a real Christian that puts their life on the line for others. But they don't have to.
So I go back from that meeting in New York City. And hearing the story for the first time from Leicester. Because Lester, at the end of our conversation, said, I think your father's deserving of the Medal of Honor. What do you think? I said Ah I think so too.
So I went back to talk to my congressman. I met with Jimmy Duncan, my congressman, and then we met with. Senator Alexander, Senator Corker, and we all began a concerted effort to try to pursue the Medal of Honor. We spent a year and a half putting together all the information and all the testimonies and everything, the affidavits that you have to have to pursue that medal, because it's the greatest. highest military award.
And in the meantime, a friend of Lester's was taking all that information to help in that process, but he was also. sending it over to Yad Vashem. asking them to consider that as righteous. And he wanted to surprise me, and he did. They looked at that information for over a year, confirmed that it was true.
They announced in twenty fifteen, when I was in Israel, And then in 2016, they had a ceremony at the Israeli embassy for the first time ever. Leaders from around the world were there. It was incredible. I don't know if there's a higher honor than to be named righteous. And Lester, at the end of his talk there that day, said this, he said, Roddy, could no more have turned 200 of his men.
over to Nazi persecution. Then he could stop breathing. He just couldn't do it. A righteous man. And a terrific job on the production, editing, and storytelling by our own Monty Montgomery.
And a special thanks to Chris Edmonds, author of No Surrender, and what a story. You just heard. We're all Jews here, he said. What a leader. What a thing to do.
And it just was instinctive. The story of Master Sergeant Roddy Edmonds here. on our American story. Hey, what's up? It's Marla Lopez.
Back to school. It's an exciting time, but it can also be overwhelming, and kids may feel isolated, a vulnerability that human traffickers can exploit. Human trafficking doesn't always look like what you expect. Everyday moments can become opportunities for someone with bad intentions, whether you're a parent, teacher, coach, or neighbor. Check in.
Ask questions. Stay connected. Blue Campaign is a national awareness initiative that provides resources to help recognize suspected instances of human trafficking. Learn the signs and how to report at dhs.gov/slash blue campaign. The day begins at the Chase Sapphire Lounge by the club at Boston Logan Airport.
You get the clam chowder. In San Diego, it's tostadas. New York, espresso martini. It's 10 a.m. Why not?
It's the quiet before your next flight, the shower that resets your day, the menu that lets you know where you are. This is access to over 1,300 airport lounges and every sapphire lounge by the club. And one card that gets you in. Chase Sapphire Reserve, the most rewarding card. Learn more at chase.com/slash sapphire reserve.
Cards issued by J.P. Morgan Chase Bank and a member, FDIC, subject to credit approval. This is Julian Edelman from Games with Names. Fantasy football can be exhausting. I mean that literally.
You're so anxious over your lineup, you can't fall asleep. Best way to deal with it is Unisom. There's a reason it's the number one doctor-recommended over-the-counter sleep aid brand. It helps you fall asleep faster, wake up less, and feel refreshed in the morning. Plus, Unisom sleep tabs are clinically tested and proven effective and completely.
Non-habit forming.
So, make the ultimate sleeper pick and put it to bed with Unisom. Use as directed. What does being financially invested sound like? A retiree on a cross-country draft.
someone with new long-term goals. They stewed it getting their start. With over 450 ETFs, iShares gives you access to countless market opportunities. iShares by BlackRock. The market is yours.
Visit www.ashares.com to deal with perspectives, which includes investment objectives, risks, fees, expenses, and other information you should read and consider carefully before investing. Risk includes principal loss, prepared by BlackRock Investment's LLC member Finero. Can small acts make a real impact in the world?
Sometimes a small thing has the power to become more, something big and meaningful. And when it comes to helping children, no act is too small. When you fill up at the Purple Giving Pump at Shell, a portion of your purchase will be donated to support charities in your community. The Giving Pump. Easy to stop, easy to donate.
From 9125 to 10:31.25, participating shell stations will donate a minimum of one cent per gallon of the fuel pump from the giving pump, or a minimum donation of $300. This is an iHeart podcast.