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What is the holocaust? | Anne Frank House

Posted By on May 20, 2021

Causes of the Holocaust

The Holocaust has a number of causes. Its direct cause is the fact that the Nazis wanted to exterminate the Jews and that they were able to do so. But their lust for murder didn't come out of nowhere. The antisemitic Nazi ideology must be considered in the broader context of the age-old hostility towards Jews, modern racism, and nationalism.

Jews in Europe have been discriminated against and persecuted for hundreds of years, often for religious reasons. For a start, they were held responsible for the death of Christ. In the Middle Ages, they were often made to live outside the community in separate neighbourhoods or ghettos and were excluded from some professions. In times of unrest, Jews were often singled out as scapegoats. During the plague pandemic around 1350, Jews were expelled and persecuted. In Russia, after the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881, there were outbreaks of violence in which groups of Jews were mistreated or murdered. With the rise of racially inspired ideologies in the nineteenth century, the idea arose that Jews belonged to a different race and were therefore not part of 'the people' or the nation.

In 1918, Germany lost the First World War. Right-wing extremists blamed the Jews. They also accused the Jews of being capitalist exploiters who profited at the expense of others. At the same time, the Jews were accused of being followers of communism who were after world domination by means of a revolution.

Yet there is no straight line from the antisemitism of the Nazis to the Holocaust. In his book Mein Kampf and his speeches, Hitler never made a secret of his hatred of the Jews and his opinion that there was no place for them in Germany, but initially, he had no plans for mass murder. Only after the outbreak of the Second World War did the Nazi top conceive of the idea and the possibility of murdering the European Jews. The Holocaust can, therefore, best be seen as the outcome of a series of decisions, influenced by circumstances. Sometimes the initiative came from lower placed Nazis, who were looking for extreme solutions to the problems they faced. Competition between different government departments also led to increasingly radical measures against the Jews. But in the end, nothing went against Hitler's wishes and he was the one who made the final decisions.

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What is the holocaust? | Anne Frank House

Children of the Holocaust Who Are Anonymous No More – The New York Times

Posted By on May 20, 2021

AMSTERDAM They appear for less than three seconds in the film footage, faces distorted through the window glass. Small cherubs, staring out confusedly at a chaotic scene on the railway platform. In a few moments, the train will roll out, and they will be on their way to a Nazi death camp.

For decades, these nameless children have been among the anonymous victims of hate captured in rare footage that showed the Nazis shipping off people in cattle cars to be murdered.

The footage is part of a compilation known as the Westerbork Film, named after the Nazi transit camp from which Dutch Jews were deported to death camps in occupied Poland and Germany. Shot in 1944, the footage has been used in countless war documentaries, the unknown passengers serving as the public faces of the millions sent to the East.

Now two Dutch researchers, authors of a new book about the film, have identified two of the children behind the glass, along with at least 10 other individuals captured on film, providing a more detailed, personal view of lives ravaged by the Holocaust.

The children were 3-year-old Marc Degen and his 1-year-old sister, Stella Degen. The researchers believe that their cousin, Marcus Simon Degen, who would soon turn 4, was also on the train with them. The children were deported with their parents on May 19, 1944, to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany. The scene was captured by Werner Rudolf Breslauer, a German-Jewish inmate, who was assigned to film aspects of the camp for propaganda purposes.

All three of the children would survive the war, even after their parents were taken from them, because of the efforts of another prisoner who hid and cared for them. Two of them are still alive to bear witness to the horrors they suffered.

Now I feel that I can shout from the roofs, Im still here, the Nazis didnt get me, said Marc Degen, who recently turned 80, in an interview from his home in Amstelveen, a leafy suburb of Amsterdam. His sister, now Stella Fertig, lives in Queens, N.Y. Their cousin, Marcus Simon, also survived the war, but he died in 2006.

The researchers, Koert Broersma and Gerard Rossing, will reveal the additional identities of other people in the film as part of the launch of their new book, Kamp Westerbork gefilmd, on Tuesday at the Remembrance Center Camp Westerbork, a museum and memorial site in Drenthe, the Netherlands.

The books publication coincides with the release of a newly restored, cleaned and digitized version of the Westerbork Film, created by the Dutch media archive, Sound and Vision. The documentary, which originally totaled about 80 minutes, is now 2.5 hours long, depicting various aspects of life at the transit camp, including some recently discovered footage. The film with the new footage has also been set to the correct speed (so people walk at a normal pace), which makes its run-time longer. It will be shown at the Camp Westerbork Memorial Center in the Netherlands beginning Wednesday.

Before these recent new identifications, only two passengers of the nearly 1,000 on board the transport had ever been named: A terrified Sinti girl who peers out from between two cattle car doors was recognized as Settela Steinbach by a Dutch journalist in 1992. Broersma and Rossing previously discovered that a woman pushed in a kind of wheelbarrow gurney was Frouwke Kroon, a 61-year-old from Appingedam, a small city in northeastern Netherlands, who was killed in Auschwitz three days later.

Putting a name to a face really makes this monolithic huge tragedy understandable and relatable, said Lindsay Zarwell, a film archivist at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. To have a first name, and last name, and know a little bit about where the person came from and what happened to them, makes it real. It sometimes gives me goose bumps. It also literally alters what youre seeing.

The restoration of the film and the investigation into its history were a joint effort of four Dutch historical organizations, Sound and Vision, Camp Westerbork, the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and the Jewish Cultural Quarter in Amsterdam.

The four institutes that look after this film wanted to make sure that the story, and the whole story, is told, said Valentine Kuypers, a curator at Sound and Vision.

With the same goal in mind, Broersma and Rossing decided to dig deeper into the history of the film, which was made at the behest of the camps SS commander, Albert Konrad Gemmeker. He hoped to send it to Nazi officials who were planning to close down the transit camp. By spring 1944, 90 percent of the Jews from the Netherlands had already been deported.

It was made as a P.R. film, Broersma said. Gemmeker was afraid of being sent to the Eastern Front because Westerbork had lost its purpose as a transit camp. The SS commander instructed Breslauer to capture images of people working, because he, wanted to show that Westerbork was still important as a work camp.

Breslauer filmed for months with materials purchased by the SS. But he went beyond the limits of his assignment, documenting not just work, but also three transports of Jews, two incoming and one departing.

The departing transport that carried the Degens was divided into two sections. Third-class passenger cars, with windows and seating, were headed to Bergen-Belsen in Germany, where some inmates were held as trading material, and swapped for German prisoners.

The other half of the train, windowless cattle cars, went to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where the vast majority of passengers were gassed on arrival.

Did Gemmeker, the camp commander, instruct Breslauer to film the transport? Broersma doesnt believe so. He interviewed Breslauers daughter, Chanita Moses, in the 1990s, and she said her father shot the transports without the commanders approval, leading to arguments.

She told us that her father was determined to leave an eyewitness account on film, Broersma said. He was eager to shoot images of these transports because they were a definite proof of the Holocaust.

The film contains about eight minutes of transport footage. Travelers with yellow stars affixed to their coats, bags dangling from their shoulders, clamber into open compartments. Some look bewildered but others seem strangely cheerful the source of much subsequent scholarly debate. The elderly and disabled can be seen sitting on a train floor, among straw and baggage. When the commander gives the sign, the massive train doors are cranked shut.

Shooting ended abruptly, for unknown reasons. The raw material was never edited. Breslauer lost whatever exemption he had for serving as filmmaker and he and his wife and three children were deported to Theresienstadt in September, then on to Auschwitz, where his wife and two sons were gassed. He died in an unknown location in February 1945; his daughter survived the war.

Some film reels were smuggled out of the camp, Broersma said; after the war they ended up at the NIOD, where historians viewed them first.

The transport footage was used in Alain Resnaiss famous Night and Fog, which is one of the most important Holocaust documentaries, said Frank van Vree, director of the NIOD Institute, in an interview, and from then on it was used in so many documentaries, I dont even know how many.

In 1988 the raw footage was spliced together in no particular order to make an 80-minute reel. That film became the most-requested material from a million-film collection of the Dutch film archives, Kuypers, the curator, said. Last year, the Dutch film director Robert Schinkel released a short film about the camps SS commander, Gemmeker, that incorporated two minutes of footage from the Westerbork film that was colorized by his production company, The Media Brothers, with a special effects partner, Planet X.

In 2017, when Kuypers and her team at Sound and Vision requested all the material from the film archives to begin their restoration, they made a discovery: two original reels. These sharper and clearer images enabled Broersma and Rossing to read names and birth dates written on baggage, which provided them the identities of other passengers.

They could also very clearly see three small children in Wagon 3. They figured out the childrens identities through a process of elimination: The Degens were the only family with three children under the age of 6 on the Bergen-Belsen transport.

The children were separated from their parents at the camp; their mothers were sent to work in salt mines and their fathers were deported to another camp, Sachsenhausen. The fathers both died in 1945; the mothers were sent to Sweden in exchange for German prisoners of war who were being held there.

The toddlers, left behind in the barracks with other orphaned children, were given no food or supervision. A Polish Jewish nurse, Luba Tryszynska, took it upon herself to care for them, scrounging and begging for enough tidbits to keep them from starving, and hiding them under beds, away from the SS. The British liberated Bergen-Belsen on April 14, 1945; all three were eventually reunited with their mothers.

Stella Fertig said she remembers nothing from the war years. People say, Its better that you dont know, she said. But I would like to know a little bit more.

She and Marc Degen were unaware of the film, or their role in it, until the authors contacted them. When Marc saw the footage, he recognized himself and his mother in the right window of the train compartment.

I was overwhelmed to see myself as a little boy being transported with my family, he said. I feel privileged that at 80 years old I feel healthy, in my head and in my body, and that I can talk about this today.

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Children of the Holocaust Who Are Anonymous No More - The New York Times

Germany stands by Israel despite the Holocaust, and because of the Holocaust – DW (English)

Posted By on May 20, 2021

"This violence cannot be justified by anything. Israel has the right to defend itself against these attacks within the framework of self-defense," German government spokesman Steffen Seibert said on Friday, denouncing the actions of Hamas in light of the massive rocket fire on Israel. Seibert speaks for the German chancellor. It is a journalistic custom to say that Angela Merkel speaks through the words of her spokesman.

Germany is 4,000 kilometers (2,500 miles) away from Israel. But, these days, distance is relative. The escalation in the conflict has shaken many in Germany. Now the conflict is spilling over onto German streets. Israeli flags are burning; insecurity and fear are growing among Israelis in Germany and German Jews.

Therelationship between Germany and Israelis special. Israel will always be marked by the Shoah, Nazi Germany's mass murder of 6 million Jews. And yet the relationship has developed impressively since 1965, the year full diplomatic relations were established between the two countries.

David Ben Gurion (1886-1973), in particular, stood for early reconciliation. Early on, the legendary first prime minister of Israel argued for the view of the "other Germany." Ben Gurion and the first German chancellor, Konrad Adenauer (1876-1967), met only twice in his lifetime:in 1960 and 1966. And yet both statesmen seemed almost like distant friends.

The first official talks between the Federal Republic of Germanyand Israel began as early as 1952, initially about a reparations agreement. Then there were secret contacts for German arms deliveries to Israel. When this became known in the Middle East in 1964, the excitement was great. And yet it was the final impetus for the establishment of full diplomatic relations in 1965, a step that not a few people in the young country found difficult. The arrival of the first German ambassador was greeted by riots.

Ben Gurion (left) and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer seemed almost like distant friends

The solidarity was strengthened by joint commemoration days and visits by German government representatives. Helmut Kohl traveled to Israel only twice in his 16 years as chancellor, but Angela Merkel has been a different story: To date, she has visited Israel seven times.

On her most recent visit, in October 2018 after political talks and a visit to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial she was awarded an honorary degree by Haifa University in Jerusalem, though the chancellor's planned side trip to the northern Israeli port city was canceled because oftime constraints.

And yet Merkel delivered a very fundamental and personal speech that sounds very relevant again today. "The trust that I experience here is like a miracle," the chancellor said. "The fact that today we are bound by bonds of friendship is an inestimable gift, and it is an improbable gift against the background of our history."

But, in recent years, her trips have become less frequent. That could be partly due to the course taken by Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing nationalist government, though the chancellor and her governments have always emphasized the importance of Israel's right to exist.

In view of Israel's settlement policy in the Palestinian territories, however, Germany has repeatedly advocated a two-state solution. German and EU adherence to this concept has had a difficult time politically, especially during the period when US President Donald Trump shaped the global view of the Holy Land. Every new Israeli settlement construction is accompanied by admonitions from Germany not to further strain the tense situation in the country.

In 2008, Merkel became the first foreign head of government ever to speak in the Knesset

In Israel, Merkel is held in high esteem despite differences of opinion on settlements. In 2008, she was the first foreign head of government ever to speak in the Knessetin German, the language of the perpetrators.

"At this point, in particular, I would like to say explicitly: Every federal government and every chancellor before me were committed to Germany's special historical responsibility for Israel's security," Merkel said in her speech. "This historic responsibility of Germany is part of my country's reason of state. That means Israel's security is never negotiable for me as German chancellor."

Merkel's words have been quoted again and again to this day, but they have also been criticized in Germany. After all, German soldiers in the Middle East, even if only as UN blue helmets inthe Golan Heights, are not something anyone in this country wants to imagine. And politically, no one wants to spell out to the last detail what this responsibility toward Israel might entail.

Germany is not among those countries that have openly initiated mediation attempts in the Middle East. This may be because of the global political significance of the conflict. But, on several occasions, German diplomats or intelligence service representatives have championed Israeli concerns in countries neighboring Israel and, for example, negotiated the fate of missing Israeli soldiers.

Relations with Israel have always been highly sensitive terrain for German politicians. They were considered particularly good under Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer. In 2001, he was in Tel Aviv for political talks when a Palestinian attack outside a disco on the city's beach left 21 dead, mostly young people. Hours later, Fischer tried to mediate between the Israeli side and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

By contrast, former Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel has experienced diplomatic tensions. In 2016, Netanyahu canceled a meeting at short notice when Gabriel had already landed in Israel because the economy minister also wanted to meet with representatives of organizations critical of the government.

A few years earlier, Gabriel, then the SPD party chairman, had visited Hebron and subsequently called Israel an "apartheid regime." Israeli settlement construction in the Palestinian territories has always causeddisagreements. In 2017, bilateral government consultations were even canceled because of it, and were finally held in Jerusalem in October 2018, the 70th year of the founding of the state of Israel.

Despite the political tensions, before the coronavirus pandemic, Israel recorded record numbers of tourists from Germany. Mutual trips by high school classes have also developed into a success story.

And now, in the new crisis? More and more politicians, including German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, are emphasizing Israel's right to defend itself. All the mainstream political camps in Germany have expressed outrage at the desecration of the Israeli flag in Germany.

But one thing always stands out: Not many people in Germany show open solidarity with Israel in times of crisis. When Iraqi missiles reached Jerusalem and Israel in early 1991 one of the country's most difficult moments bringing death and destruction, barely two dozen people stood in front of the Israeli Embassy in Bonn on a cold January evening as a sign of solidarity.

Merkel's last speech in Israel to date, on October 4, 2018, when she received the Haifa honorary degree in Jerusalem, concluded with a promise and an assurance. She "promises to come to Haifa one day, too," she said. She would carry the message that comes with such an honor, she said, "to Germany as well."

"The ambassador of the State of Israel in Germany will watch closely how we behave," reads the last sentence of this speech.

This article has been translated from German.

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this years elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments asGermany enters the post-Merkel era.

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Germany stands by Israel despite the Holocaust, and because of the Holocaust - DW (English)

How USPS lost a Holocaust survivor’s remains in the mail – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on May 20, 2021

USPS lost Grandma (A THREAD)

Arielle Yuspeh typed those words into Twitter late Wednesday afternoon, knowing it was an act of utter desperation. But the West Hollywood resident was running out of options.

It had been almost two weeks since her uncle Richard had gone to a post office near his home in Milwaukee, carrying an urn with the cremated remains of his mother, Eugenia Yuspeh.

We called her Nanya, Arielle said of her grandmother.

At 97, Eugenia had been one of the oldest survivors of the Holocaust at the time of her death at an assisted living facility. She fled from Poland to Russia, and although she was never in a concentration camp, she was captured and sent to a work camp in Siberia.

Eugenia eventually escaped, met her husband, Albert, and gave birth to their first son, and the family made its way to America, moving first to New York and then to New Orleans. Later in life, she would move to Milwaukee to be closer to her son Richard.

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However, other members of her family werent so fortunate. Eugenias mother and three siblings were sent to the gas chamber. Two other siblings were killed in a death march.

Eugenias son Wayne said thats why she wanted to be cremated, even though it is rare for Jews.

She wanted to go the way her mother went, he explained from his home in New Orleans. She told me, Thats the way they went out, and thats the way I want to die.

And so she was cremated in Milwaukee on May 3 several days after her death, because of safety precautions related to COVID-19, which made the time frame for a customary Jewish funeral impossible.

And on May 4, the U.S. Postal Service took possession of Eugenias ashes, which were to be shipped as only the federal agency can legally do overnight to New Orleans for her funeral.

Then the unexpected happened.

Days came and went. The tracking number revealed that the package, affixed with an orange label with the words cremated remains in all caps, hadnt moved.

Arielle started making calls. So did her uncle in Milwaukee, who reached out to local members of Congress. Arielles mother, Amy, made a few trips to a sorting facility in New Orleans, where postal workers stopped what they were doing to search the shelves.

It all proved futile.

So on Wednesday, Arielle turned to Twitter. I write all of this to say, her burial is meant to happen this weekend and were at a standstill. Consider this a desperate plea.

On Thursday, Arielle boarded a plane from L.A. to New Orleans to join her parents.

She never got to see her mother. Her mothers ashes are in the clouds, Wayne told me. But at least we knew that I had a place where her ashes were [going to go]. And thats kind of what gets me. It just really just tears me up, quite frankly.

::

Although this is only one case one inexplicable, inexcusable case its a reflection of much larger problems within the U.S. Postal Service.

In the last three months of 2020, for example, only 78% of first-class mail was delivered on time to households and businesses.

Even after the crush of holiday packages and letters had dissipated in the first three months of 2021, carriers again delivered only about 78% of first-class mail on time. Thats down from 92% in the same quarter a year ago.

Much of this, of course, has to do with cost-cutting measures implemented by U.S. Postmaster Gen. Louis DeJoy. And even after taking heat for ordering the removal of mail sorting equipment, slowing the delivery of ballots before last years election, he has doubled down, announcing more service cuts and possible layoffs.

Its no wonder stories abound about the unreliability of the Postal Service. And stories like that of the Yuspeh family dont help.

I asked a Postal Service spokesperson in Los Angeles to help, and she tried. But even with the tracking number and copy of the receipt Richard received when he paid $94.45 to ship his mothers remains, she couldnt track down Eugenia.

On behalf of the United States Postal Service, I want to express our deep condolences to the Yuspeh family, spokesperson Evelina Ramirez wrote Thursday evening. We apologize for the added grief the family is experiencing due to the delay in delivery of this very important package.

She vowed that the agency would continue to search mail processing facilities from Milwaukee all the way to New Orleans.

Our thoughts and condolences go out to the family during this time, Ramirez continued, and know that we will do everything we can to locate this important mailpiece.

In the meantime, the Yuspeh family gathered Friday in New Orleans as planned. But what was supposed to be a funeral, complete with the burial of Eugenias ashes, became more of a small service to commemorate the life a strong-willed woman who ran a business, did charity work and, in her last years, shared her stories of the Holocaust after decades of relative silence.

Its tough, Arielle said. We dont know where she is. And no one else does either.

I mean, Wayne added, how can you lose a package with remains with codes and numbers and scanning these days?

::

A few hours after this column published on Saturday morning, the tracking number on the Postal Services website suddenly showed movement. The package containing Eugenias ashes had arrived in New Orleans, and then in Metairie, and was out for delivery.

Not long after that, two high-ranking local Postal Service officials hand delivered it.

In a word, Arielle said she was grateful.

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How USPS lost a Holocaust survivor's remains in the mail - Los Angeles Times

World Premiere of Out of the Ashes of Holocaust by Joshua Fishbein – Business Wire

Posted By on May 20, 2021

--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

WHAT:

IMMORTAL FIRE, a nationwide, digital broadcast concert event, to include pieces from Latvia, England, and America.

WHO:

Washington Master Chorale (WMC) led by Artistic Director Thomas Colohan, is a critically acclaimed Washington, DC based, sixty-voice professional and volunteer

chorus, nationally recognized for its vocal excellence and unique programing.

WHEN:

Broadcast Friday, May 21, 7 PM ET.

WHERE:

Nationwide.

IMMORTAL FIRE is the third and final broadcast concert event of WMCs 11th Season concluding Friday, May 21 with the World Premiere of composer Joshua Fishbeins Out of the Ashes of Holocaust.

Fishbeins composition is based on and inspired by his grandmothers familys struggle to survive the horrors of World War II. In September 1943, the composers grandmother, Josephine Velelli Becker, at age seven, went into hiding with eight other members of her family, protected by a Christian family in Nazi-occupied Greece. The composer observed except for the extraordinary kindness of this family, my grandmothers family would most certainly have perished along with 90 percent of the Greek Jewish community. Because my grandmother survived, I am alive today to tell my familys story through music. Fishbein added, That my children exist is a result of the great humanity shown by the Michalos family, a Christian family, who took in my relatives and sheltered them during World War II.

In 1984, the Michalos family was recognized as Righteous Among the Nations, an honorific conferred by the State of Israel to describe non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews from the Nazis.

For viewing and other information, and / or tickets, please visit: WashingtonMasterChorale.org or call: (202) 596-8934.

WMC is pleased to again be participating in Do More 24, a Washington, DC area-wide effort to support non-profit organizations including WMC. DM24 EARLY GIVIING started May 3 and continues through an all day, 24-hour giving blitz Wednesday May 19. Learn more about Do More 24 and make a donation by visiting https://www.domore24.org/washingtonmasterchorale.

NOTE TO MEDIA: For additional concert information, or to arrange interview with Composer Joshua Fishbein and / or WMC Artistic Director Thomas Colohan, please contact Michael Darling at (302) 644-7116 or (202) 997-8263 or by email: mdarlingbox@aol.com

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World Premiere of Out of the Ashes of Holocaust by Joshua Fishbein - Business Wire

Pivoting to Virtual Field Trips and Education Programs: Advice from The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum – aam-us.org

Posted By on May 20, 2021

Photo credit: Courtesy of The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum

At The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum, our mission is to teach history in order to impact behaviors today.With students in particular, we want them to encounter the history of the Holocaust and human rights while also encouraging them to think through fundamental questions about human behavior. We inspire students to consider the consequences of their choices and challenge them to think critically and become Upstanders.

Providing these engaging and transformative experiences became more complicated in March 2020, when the museum had to close for COVID-19. Though we had some limited experience in virtual programming, like teacher professional development courses and special student engagement events offered via videoconferencing, we were primarily an in-person education facility and behind on virtual program development. The past year has therefore been a time of learning and experimentation for us, and we want to share the results and lessons in this post.

The shift to virtual field trips did not happen overnight. Our education team implemented two phases of new virtual programming for educators and students: Virtual Outreach Program (phase 1) and Virtual Field Trips and Education Programs (phase 2). Each phase came with intentional adjustments to fit the needs of our audience while maintaining the goal of connecting students to the museum and our mission through live and engaging learning experiences.

Initially, we repurposed the museums existing educational programs to quickly adapt to the immediate need of students and teachers who were learning from home. We did not want to reinvent the wheel, but rather adjust it. We specifically looked for highly interactive in-person programs and lessons that could be converted to virtual and engage a diverse student audience from home.

This first phase of virtual outreach programs did not include virtual field trips, as we understood that teachers often did not have the time and ability to connect live or in real time. We also quickly learned that many parents took on the role of educators. Understanding the immediate challenges and connectivity divide, we focused on creating hybrid programs that included asynchronous and live components.

One of these hybrid virtual outreach programs was our newly developed Camp Upstander, for ages six to ten, and Upstander Institute, for ages eleven to eighteen. After a short registration, parents received a flexible learning plan at the beginning of each week with access to asynchronous activities and live virtual programs led by our museum educators. The response was very positive. In 2020, 879 students participated in the program. The feedback from parents confirmed that the program was engaging. One parent wrote, I feel [Upstander Institute] was presented in a way to make kids think rather than just tell them.

As schools began to reopen virtually in August 2020, we commenced phase 2 and began creating virtual field trips and education programs specifically designed to bring the museum to the classroom. Although we knew that creating a single recorded tour of the museum would be easier, we felt strongly that live and interactive programs aligned better with our mission and strategic goals as an education team. This was a risk, but we were willing to take that challenge.

Our team devoted the first month of this phase to developing the virtual field trips. We met with local school district administrators to discuss teaching capabilities for the upcoming academic year, and local teachers to discuss virtual learning strategies. We built virtual cartsiPads mounted on rolling tripodsto allow our staff educators and docents to communicate with students through real-time videoconferencing from the galleries. We wrote a brand-new virtual field trip script designed to ensure adherence to the Texas teaching standards, Texas Education Skills and Knowledge (TEKS), and implementation of Social Emotional Learning (SEL) strategies. We created a Teacher Resource Guide with asynchronous lessons, discussion, and resources to use before or after the virtual field trip.

We dedicated two months to training our volunteer docent educators so they had time to adjust to the new format and virtual teaching style. This meant practicing key logistical learning skills like making eye contact with the camera, refreshing their Q&A skills, and acclimating them to using the chat function on the virtual platform. In addition, we taught them to play testimony videos and do virtual artifact analysis. From there, we were able to launch the virtual field trips.

Our education team learned quickly in the first few months. For instance, we found out that teachers expect quicker turnaround in booking virtual tours. We also noticed immediately that students ask more questions virtually than during in-person toursengagement doubled, if not tripled. Teachers were initially hesitant and did not know what to expect, but were overwhelmingly praising our virtual field trips afterwards. One wrote in her tour evaluation: This was my first virtual field trip, so I had no/low expectations. I was absolutely impressed! The pre-trip materials were helpful. The best part, however, was the tour itself. Our docent was lively and energetic. We had no problem hearing or understanding her with her mask on, her pace was perfect, and her questions and interactions with the students was engaging. I couldnt believe how real it felt for a virtual tour.

Our education team has learned many valuable lessons from our pivot to virtual field trips. Here are some tips that we have gained from our experience.

Virtual field trips have allowed us to reach students in an innovative and relevant way. We are excited to continue to spread our mission to teach the history of the Holocaust and advance human rights to combat prejudice, hatred, and indifference in a new way, and we look forward to educating young minds on the past to inform a brighter future.

Mary Pat Higgins is the CEO of The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum.

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Pivoting to Virtual Field Trips and Education Programs: Advice from The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum - aam-us.org

Las Vegas native, Holocaust survivor who tried so hard to forget now on a mission to remember – FOX5 Las Vegas

Posted By on May 20, 2021

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Las Vegas native, Holocaust survivor who tried so hard to forget now on a mission to remember - FOX5 Las Vegas

Readers Write: No political leader should head the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County – Great Neck News – The Island Now

Posted By on May 20, 2021

Alan Mindel is entitled to his opinion; he is not entitled to his own facts.

Apparently, Alan must have been out of town when the scandal of Steve Markowitzs exposed e-mails concerning his views of Orthodox Jews were disclosed and reported in the Great Neck News.

Quoting directly from the Great Neck News article, printed at the time:

Steve Markowitz, the chairman of the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County, has issued an apology for an email sent in 2015 during that years Village of Great Neck mayoral race after it resurfaced in the 2019 mayoral contest and led some to believe he is anti-Orthodox.

(The actual e-mail remains available on-line.)

Robert Spitalnick, in a separate letter to the editor, alleged that Markowitz was engaged in a series of anti-Semitic whispering campaigns intended to keep Orthodox Jews out of public office in this town.

He made reference to a screenshot of an alleged email from Markowitz in 2015, the year Pedram Bral was first elected mayor, which said, Have no reluctance to tell people that this election is about an attempt by right-wing Orthodox groups to take over the village.

It is widely accepted by families of survivors in Nassau County that Steves service to a political party and the resulting correlation of his activities to that party, made his continued service as chair of the Holocaust Center untenable. Hence, the new leader.

No political party leader should head up any Holocaust Museum, anywhere, other than in an honorary capacity.

Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld

Great Neck

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Readers Write: No political leader should head the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County - Great Neck News - The Island Now

The dignity of Palestinians will resurrect the Arab Spring – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on May 18, 2021

About 10 years ago, a desperate act of protest against state violence by a single citizen, Mohamed Bouazizi, ignited in Tunisia, and then across the Middle East, an unprecedented uprising that came to be known as the Arab Spring.

Bouazizis dignity and sacrifice not only served as a call to action to millions fed up with state oppression and abuse across the region, but also finally albeit temporarily turned the international communitys attention to their plight.

The Arab Spring, however, did not succeed in delivering democracy, justice and equality to all peoples of the region. Indeed, as we celebrated its 10th anniversary earlier this year, many talks, discussions and interviews were organised to try and determine what went wrong with the 2011 democracy movement.

I believe a crucial factor in the Arab Springs failure was the international communitys, and especially the Western powers, fear of chaos their fear that the toppling of corrupt autocratic regimes and the establishment of real Arab democracies would make the region far less controllable.

In the months and years following the Arab Spring, the Wests efforts to prevent chaos in the region allowed those who stand to lose the most from democratisation Israel and its vassal allies, the dictatorships of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt to silence any dissenting voices and calls for democracy with violence and increased oppression.

The Wests self-serving decision to turn a blind eye to the abuses committed by these authoritarian states in the name of preserving an unjust status quo enabled the Egyptian army to massacre more than 1,000 civilians in August 2013 and jail some 60,000 Egyptians for their political views. It allowed the Saudi regimes hitmen to murder dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the countrys Istanbul consulate in 2018 and jail womens rights activists like Loujain al-Hathloul on baseless charges. The Wests indifference also enabled Morocco to crackdown on journalists, artists and activists critical of state authorities, some of whom are still in prison and dying on hunger strike.

Meanwhile, being humiliated by Israeli authorities, being evicted from their homes by Zionist extremists, being maimed and killed by the occupations security forces, and slowly suffocating under the weight of an apartheid regime, continued to be the daily reality of Palestinians. The West, in its hypocritical attempt to maintain stability, ignored their suffering.

And yet, by turning a blind eye to these mounting abuses by Arab dictatorships and the Israeli apartheid state, the international community was not in fact preventing chaos, but sowing the seeds of a new revolution. Because there cannot be true stability without democracy and justice.

Ten years ago, a single mans last act of resistance in Tunisia made millions across the region realise that they cannot take it any more and take to the streets to demand change.

Today, something similar is happening in Palestine.

The plight of the inhabitants of the occupied East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, who are being forced out of their homes to make way for Jewish settlers, coupled with the images of Muslims being attacked by Jewish extremists at the Al-Aqsa Mosque during the holy month of Ramadan, has sparked a huge wave of support for Palestinians across the Middle East and the world.

The dignity of the Palestinians, abandoned by the international community but still standing proud and fighting for their rights, is an inspiration to millions suffering under similarly brutal regimes across the region.

Those in power in the West, however, are either silent on what is happening in Palestine, or pretending it all started with attacks by Hamas. Perhaps they think if they continue to support the Israeli apartheid and its regional allies in the name of stability, the calls for democracy and justice in the region will eventually die down.

What they fail to grasp, however, is that the gap between Arab populations and their rulers has never been wider and, most importantly, that the Arab populations have now reached the point where they cannot take it any more.

For years, Palestinians have been left to suffer on their own abandoned by the international community and by Arab leaders, as if their struggle was over and nothing could be done to help them. But in the past few weeks, they have shown the world that their thirst for life is intact and they are not ready to give up the fight. Their dignity and resistance made all of us suffering under Israels regional allies, and craving for freedom and justice, realise that we too cannot take it any more.

Palestinians have reignited an urge for freedom that is irrepressible, and will spread all over.

The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeeras editorial stance.

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The dignity of Palestinians will resurrect the Arab Spring - Al Jazeera English

As violence spikes between Israel and Palestine, Grand Rapids group gathers in protest – MLive.com

Posted By on May 18, 2021

GRAND RAPIDS, MI -- Protesters in downtown Grand Rapids called for an end to U.S. aid to Israel as the countrys ongoing conflict with Palestine flared into a new round of violence this week.

About 35 people gathered at the corner of Fulton Street and Division Avenue for a protest called Free Palestine: Stop U.S. Aid to Israel.

They hope to raise awareness about the conflict and Israels occupation of Palestinian areas, considered illegal by many. They say Palestinians are suffering disproportionately to any loss by the Israelis.

Both the Israelis and Hamas, the leadership in Gaza, have traded artillery strikes in recent days. But the Israeli technology is more advanced and, so far, a reported 119 Palestinians in Gaza, including 30 children, have been killed. Eight Israelis have died in rocket attacks.

In 2020 the United States provided $3.8 billion to Israel, according to a memo from the Congressional Research Service, which accounts for about 20 percent of the countrys defense budget.

Barbara Howard, an organizer of Saturdays event, said the aid is simply not acceptable and described Israels actions as war crimes.

We are resisting because its our tax dollars that are doing this, she said. We send so much aid to Israel.

Were here to say were not in favor of this and that people should not just blow it off or ignore it, because it is our doing. We are complicit, she said.

Saturdays gathering included several people with Palestinian ties. A 30-year-old man and his mother, who immigrated to the United States from Palestine, showed up.

I think the biggest misconception is that, when people pay attention to these things, they pay attention to these flare-ups and they think this is the point of when the conflict started. But the conflict has been going on for the last 73 years, said the 30-year-old, who didnt want to be named for fear of retribution if he travels to Palestine.

The latest violence, by most accounts, was exacerbated by an ongoing attempt to evict seven Palestinian families from an East Jerusalem neighborhood.

Howard said that after she scheduled Saturdays event on social media, Grand Rapids area people with Palestinian backgrounds contacted her, saying they wanted to attend.

She said it was good for them to be visible at the protest.

They are our neighbors here in Grand Rapids and around the world, she said.

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As violence spikes between Israel and Palestine, Grand Rapids group gathers in protest - MLive.com


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