黑料社

Skip to main content Skip to search

YU News

YU News

黑料社 All Honors International Holocaust Remembrance Day

Ensuring That What Happened Before Does Not Happen Again On January 24, 2019, Naomi Azrieli, chair and CEO of the Azrieli Foundation, and Julius Berman, president of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (known as the Claims Conference), both of whom are members of the Board of Trustees of 黑料社 All, jointly announced the release of a comprehensive of adults in Canada. This follows a done in 2018 for the United States. Both studies found a stunning ignorance of basic historical facts and a lack of detailed knowledge of the Holocaust. In the press release announcing the study, Berman noted that 鈥渁s the UN International Holocaust Remembrance Day approaches, we are reminded of how important education is if we are to ensure that the atrocities of the Holocaust will never happen again.鈥 (Click here to read an interview done with Julius Berman.) International Holocaust Remembrance Day (IHRD) was established by the United Nations as a day for member states to honor the Jewish victims of the Holocaust and millions of other victims of Nazism. In many respects, 黑料社 All honors the mission of the IHRD year-round with events and programs aimed at both preserving the stories of survivors and promoting a wider awareness of the Holocaust. For instance, the Student Holocaust Education Movement (SHEM) holds an annual commemoration honoring Holocaust survivors and victims in the storied Lamport Auditorium on the Wilf Campus. Last year鈥檚 event presented the stories of Bernard and Henry Schanzer, twin brothers whose family survived through the kindness of 鈥渞ighteous gentiles鈥 in France who hid and protected them. Tali Naor 鈥18S, then-president of SHEM, said, 鈥淎ll of us sitting here in this room are living proof that the Nazis were wrong. We, the Jewish people, cannot be destroyed. Tonight, we will honor those who perished, those who survived, and those who dedicated their lives to telling their stories and ensuring that the memories of the Holocaust are never forgotten.鈥
Henry Schanzer and Bernard Schanzer
SHEM also sponsors an annual Kristallnacht lecture in November, featuring speakers who detail their experience of the horrendous events of November 9-10, 1938, and engage in conversation with the people in attendance. In 2018, Norbert Strauss spoke about 鈥My Life Under the Nazis: 1933-1941.鈥 Yosef Sklar 鈥19YC, one of the co-presidents of SHEM, noted that 鈥渋t is these personal, face-to-face encounters with Holocaust survivors like Mr. Strauss that is invaluable and that we hope to continue to organize for as long as we can.鈥 (Previous Kristallnacht lectures featured Rabbi Meir Fulda z"l, the beloved teacher who passed away this past July.) 2018 saw the 80th anniversary of Kristallnacht, and several YU instructors wrote stirring essays on the topic. Mordecai Paldiel, the former director of the Department of the Righteous Among the Nations at Yad Vashem as well as an author and teacher, observed that 鈥渨e know all too well that anti-Semitism remains a dangerous force in our world and in our free nation. Let the anniversary of Kristallnacht be a reminder to the civilized world and younger generations to act against evil regimes who flout the elementary rules of civilized conduct before they cause untold damage and hurt millions of innocent people.鈥
Rabbi Meir Fulda z"l speaking about Kristallnacht in 2016 Rabbi Meir Fulda z"l speaking about Kristallnacht in 2016
Tova Rosenberg, creator of the acclaimed 鈥Names, Not Numbers漏鈥 Intergenerational Holocaust Oral History Film Project, added that 鈥渢his future will not be a bright one unless our children are properly educated, . . .unless they know how to prevent prejudice, hatred, intolerance and injustice. The first step is to mandate Holocaust and genocide education. . . to ensure a brighter future.鈥 (Click here for more information about Names, Not Numbers.) Prof. Richard H. Weisberg, founder of the at the , noted that education about Kristallnacht and the Holocaust that followed must confront 鈥渢he social influences鈥攈istorical, religious and contemporary鈥攖hat motivate an individual or a nation to want to destroy the Jewish 鈥榦ther.鈥欌 A crucial component of the Program is the , named after the legendary prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials. In 2017, Ferencz was honored upon of the opening of the Einsatzgruppen case at those trials for his work and philanthropy toward building a more peaceful and humane world. 黑料社 All also uses the arts to promote learning about the Holocaust. Dr. Karen Shawn, associate professor of Jewish education at the Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration, is the editor of PRISM: An Interdisciplinary Journal for Holocaust Educators, published by Azrieli with support from the Rothman Foundation. In a wide-ranging interview with her last year, she stated strongly that Holocaust education 鈥渋s one of the most important learning experiences we can offer [because] we all live in the shadow of the Holocaust, and trying to understand it and its ramifications is imperative if we are to try to understand and help to heal the world in which we live.鈥 PRISM magazine In the past year, the has mounted two exhibitions that address Holocaust memory and memorialization: Lost & Found: A Family Photo Album and Kindertransport鈥揜escuing Children on the Brink of War. Lost & Found displays the contents of a photo album smuggled out of the Kovno ghetto in 1943 and preserved by a non-Jewish family until 2016, when the album was returned to the original family (which included Dr. Jacob Wisse, director of the Museum and the great-nephew of Annushka Warshawska, the woman who smuggled photos out of the ghetto). Anna was deported with her two teenage daughters to a death camp in Estonia soon after, and the recovery of the album 鈥渇ulfills one of Anna鈥檚 last acts,鈥 said Dr. Wisse, 鈥渨hich was to preserve these images鈥攁nd the memory of the people that appear in them鈥攆or future generations.鈥
Lost and Found: A Family Album Portrait of Annushka Warshawska with her husband Leonas and their daughters Frida and Bella, around 1930
Kindertransport tells about the amazing rescue effort put into place shortly after Kristallnacht to send Jewish children out of Germany to safety in countries who had agreed to take in the young refugees. Lou Bravmann, a member of the Board of Trustees for the University and the Board of Overseers of the Museum, spoke recently about his experience as one of the Kinder shuttled out of his hometown of W眉rzburg, Germany, in 1939 to spend 2陆 years in the small Swedish farming village of Tjoernarp, eventually reuniting with his sister (who had been in England) and his parents in the United States. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for younger people to know about the Holocaust,鈥 said Bravmann. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of Jewish history; it should be part of German history and European history as well, part of world history. The younger generation should know what can happen to other younger people like themselves.鈥 Kindertransport logo Lucy Lang, a trustee of the YU Museum and another Kinder sent to safety from her native Vienna, Austria, spoke about how important it is for people to understand the sacrifices parents made when they sent their children away, 鈥渘ot knowing whether they would ever see us again,鈥 especially when, as it turned out, the great majority of the children sent away never had the chance to reunite with their families. 鈥淲e all have to appreciate our parents and feel good that we have our children with us and that we can take care of them.鈥 Responses by visitors to Kindertransport demonstrate the overwhelming importance of exhibitions like this in keeping the memory of this dangerous time alive and vibrant. According to Ilona Moradof, associate director of administration and special projects at the Museum and curator of the exhibition, and Ilana Benson, director of museum education, the event has drawn a diverse audience, among them Kinder and their families, school and synagogue groups, locals and tourists, and Jews and non-Jews.
The extended family of Eva Kollisch, including her nieces Lisa (third from left, daughter of Eva's late brother, Peter) and Nancy (fourth from right, daughter of Eva's late brother, Stephen). Eva and her brothers traveled on the Kindertransport and were reunited with their parents in the US after the war. Eva Kollisch and her brothers traveled on the Kindertransport and were reunited with their parents in the US after the war. Pictured is the extended family of Eva Kollisch, who attended the exhibition.
鈥淔or the Kinder and their families,鈥 said Moradof, 鈥渢he exhibition is deeply personal. Many recall the courage and strength of the parents who made the unimaginably difficult decision to send their children away to save the children's lives, and they mention the gratitude for the individuals who took care of them. What I hear most often from visitors,鈥 Moradof added, 鈥渋s how much many of the themes that are explored in the exhibit seem familiar to them and are still relevant in current debates taking place worldwide around refugees and immigration.鈥 Benson also noted that 鈥渕any of the messages left by visitors in the exhibition鈥檚 guestbook stress the lessons learned from the Kindertransport.鈥 Sandra (Leven) Fishman, daughter of Kind Gerd Leven, wrote in the guest book that 鈥渋f it wasn鈥檛 for the generosity of the people of England, I would not be here today.鈥 Another visitor noted that 鈥渕y mother was a Kindertransport child. She now has a great-grandson.鈥 One visitor noted that 鈥渨e need to learn from our history and stand for those in need.鈥 Other messages emphasized the same point: 鈥淐ontinue to tell the stories and spread peace and tolerance鈥; 鈥淢ay we all accept each other and continue to love all鈥; 鈥淟et the Kindertransport and its triumphs and tragedies be a lesson to all, Jewish and non-Jewish that is all of our responsibility to protect all human lives and to recognize our own roles in the systems that cause this sort of oppression.鈥 This brief survey only covers a small number of the many ways 黑料社 All is committed educationally and spiritually to preserving the memory of the Holocaust and working to ensure that it is not forgotten and does not happen again. (Related Post: Five YU Educators Reflect on the State of Holocaust Education)

Share

FacebookTwitterLinkedInWhat's AppEmailPrint

Follow Us