(en) « Lantos's list »(Archive.org • Wikiwix • Archive.is • Google • Que faire ?), Jerusalem Post (consulté le ) : « Born in Hungary in 1928 to assimilated Jewish parents, he escaped from a forced-labor brigade, joined the resistance and was eventually, with his later-to-be-wife Annette, among the tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews rescued by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. ».
Randolph L. Braham, « Les opérations de sauvetage en Hongrie : mythes et réalités », Revue d’histoire de la Shoah, 2006/2, no 185, p. 397-426. Le chiffre de Yehuda Bauer est publié dans Juifs à vendre ? Les négociations entre Nazis et Juifs, 1933-1945, p. 237.
« #Monde - Les proches de Raoul Wallenberg, sauveur de 20 000 juifs pendant l'Holocauste, demandent des comptes à la Russie », Crif - Conseil Représentatif des Institutions Juives de France, (lire en ligne, consulté le ).
(en) « Lantos's list »(Archive.org • Wikiwix • Archive.is • Google • Que faire ?), Jerusalem Post (consulté le ) : « Born in Hungary in 1928 to assimilated Jewish parents, he escaped from a forced-labor brigade, joined the resistance and was eventually, with his later-to-be-wife Annette, among the tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews rescued by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. ».
(en) « Lantos's list »(Archive.org • Wikiwix • Archive.is • Google • Que faire ?), Jerusalem Post (consulté le ) : « Born in Hungary in 1928 to assimilated Jewish parents, he escaped from a forced-labor brigade, joined the resistance and was eventually, with his later-to-be-wife Annette, among the tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews rescued by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. ».
(en) « Lantos's list »(Archive.org • Wikiwix • Archive.is • Google • Que faire ?), Jerusalem Post (consulté le ) : « Born in Hungary in 1928 to assimilated Jewish parents, he escaped from a forced-labor brigade, joined the resistance and was eventually, with his later-to-be-wife Annette, among the tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews rescued by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. ».
(en) « Lantos's list »(Archive.org • Wikiwix • Archive.is • Google • Que faire ?), Jerusalem Post (consulté le ) : « Born in Hungary in 1928 to assimilated Jewish parents, he escaped from a forced-labor brigade, joined the resistance and was eventually, with his later-to-be-wife Annette, among the tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews rescued by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. ».
(en) Joshua Prager, « The Wallenberg Curse: The Search for the Missing Holocaust Hero Began in 1945. The Unending Quest Tore His Family Apart », The Wall Street Journal, (lire en ligne, consulté le ).