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Holocaust Museums teddy bear and train set carry the weight of genocide – Houston Chronicle

Posted By on February 16, 2021

Ursula Meyers teddy bear, Bremen, Germany, circa 1925.

Tragedy can imbue the most mundane things in the world with overwhelming significance. Thats the main thrust of Stories of Survival: Object. Image. Memory., the new special exhibit at the Holocaust Museum Houston featuring 60 objects donated by survivors of the Holocaust as well as other genocides.

Collected and photographed by Jim Lommasson, each object is presented on a white board with handwritten thoughts by survivors and their families describing how and why these specific items meant something in the context of a mass human atrocity.

To walk through the exhibit is to have your understanding of reality be completely turned inside out. Something as simple as a childs toy train set or a handkerchief goes from meaningless old junk into a tactile point in history on which monsters hung their evil intentions. The train wasnt just a present; it was the thing a terrified father gave to his children as they fled Gotha, Germany in 1938 with little but the clothes on their backs. Sheltered by cousins in Chicago, the little electric train delighted three generations of a family after soothing the sorrows of those who lost their homes to Nazism.

The experience is jarring. It makes you immediately wonder what you would take with you if you could save only one thing in such circumstances. Playing cards to pass the time in refugee camps? A prayer book for strength? Its an uncomfortable question that is sadly still relevant today.

When: Tue-Sat 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun noon-5 p.m. through April 18, 2021

Where: Holocaust Museum Houston, 5401 Caroline Street

Details: $15-$19; hmh.org

Stories of Survival is largely focused on the Holocaust, but it weaves in the experiences of other, more recent pogroms alongside the German Nazi narrative. Sometimes the resemblances are disturbingly identical. A childs doll with the simple phrase I was seven dominates the back wall of the exhibit and is an artifact from the massacres in Iraq and Syria following the fall of the Hussein regime. Nearby, a one-eyed teddy bear sits staring into the distance. It had survived buried as a treasure by a child who escaped Hitlers regime but thankfully lived to reclaim it.

The moral of the exhibit in these times is inescapable; genocide is an ongoing concern and not a historical fascination. Sepia photographs of German youths are hung next to glossy color pictures of Sudanese refugees or Muslims building new lives in America. The body counts may be lower than the Holocaust, but they remain functional identical on a fractal scale.

The baldness of this fact makes the exhibit daring. There is a reason the HMS is the only museum in Houston I can ever remember having to empty my pockets and go through a metal detector to visit, and why signs prohibiting the carrying of guns are displayed on boards on the sidewalk rather than discreetly on window stickers. A lot of Americans actively reject the stories of refugees, assuming them to be an invading pestilence unwelcome on our shores. That was true in the 1930s when the country barely allowed German Jews to settle here and its sadly true today.

Maybe Stories of Survival can move the needle on that hostility. By framing the Holocaust and more contemporary genocides as the same, sad story, perhaps the reverence most Americans feel for the survivors of Hitler will rub off in the now when compassion is needed yet again. Lommasson has certainly tried to make that happen with his remarkable work.

Jef Rouner is a Houston-based writer.

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Holocaust Museums teddy bear and train set carry the weight of genocide - Houston Chronicle

With Anti-Semitic Attacks Surging, the Writing of a Fifth-Grader in Prewar Poland Teaches Tolerance – NBC4 Washington

Posted By on February 16, 2021

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research

Beba Epstein.

Before her world disappeared into the horrors of the Holocaust, fifth-grader Beba Epstein wrote about her life in pre-World War II Poland, describing summers in the countryside, an outing to watch the movie "Uncle Toms Cabin" in her hometown of Vilna, a religious grandfather who never smiled and a grandmother who was "a great storyteller."

One thing for sure I was a big brat, she wrote in that essay, composed during the 1933-'34 school year at the Sofia Gurevich school in what is now Lithuania.

She got into mischief at home, sending dishes crashing to the floor from a sideboard when she was 2 and ripping her cousins neatly copied geography assignment to bits, but also grew into a keen if sometimes unsparing chronicler of her secular, middle-class life. She described working late into the night on school work but also the illnesses that forced her to miss class and the deprivations that her parents suffered during the First World War.

I speak Polish and Yiddish, but I prefer to read in Yiddish, she wrote. I learned to write very quickly!

From left: Beba's father, Shimon Epstein, her mother, Malke Epstein and her sister, Esye Epstein. There are no known photos of Beba Epstein's brothers Mote and Khayim.

After Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, "The Autobiography of Beba Epstein" was lost along with thousands of documents once held at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Vilna.

Part of the collection was destroyed, part was taken by the Nazis to Frankfurt for a planned anti-Semitic institute, but another cache of material, including her memoir, remained forgotten until 2017. That is when some 170,000 pages of material was discovered.

They had been smuggled out of YIVO building into the Vilna ghetto by Jews who made up what was known as the Paper Brigade." The material was later dug up and then concealed in various places by librarian Antanas Ulpis. He hid some in the Church of St. George, which was converted by the Soviets into the National Lithuanian Book Chamber and is now the Martynas Mavydas National Library of Lithuania, and some in the Wroblewski Library. All are in what is now Vilnius.

Today the childs essay is at the heart of the first interactive exhibit of an online museum created by YIVO, which began reassembling its collection after it relocated to New York in 1940. The notebook remains in the library in Lithuania, but the virtual display, the start of the Bruce and Francesca Cernia Slovin Online Museum, becomes a jumping off point for an exploration of Jewish life in Eastern Europe.

Designed by the museums chief curator, Karolina Ziulkoski, Beba Epstein: The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Girl draws on YIVOs more than 23 million documents and artifacts and on the University of California, Los Angeles' Holocaust Testimonies Project, done in cooperation with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Beba Epstein: the Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Girl | Short Trailer from YIVO Online Museum on Vimeo.

As YIVO, founded in Vilna in 1925, considered how to highlight material in online exhibitions, Ziulkoski thought to focus on individuals whose lives could be told through the artifacts in the archives. Beba Epstein was an appealing way to reach other children.

What struck a chord with me with her story is that given the refugee situation in the world right now, you can see that her life was not unlike the lives of many kids today, Ziulkoski said. There is a lot to connect with kids today.

Beba, who was born in 1922, quarreled with her siblings, was a good student in school, ice skated in the winter and swam in the summer. She went to summer camp.

I am very loved at home, but they dont spoil me only when Im sick then I get special privileges, she wrote.

Her mother, Malke, suffered during the First World War, Beba wrote, when the food the Germans provided was inedible and her brothers and father were arrested and detained for days. Her father, Shimen, was sent off to Turkestan and Tashkent for his military service and then was drafted for the First World War.

He took every precaution to avoid being taken prisoner because the Germans tortured their prisoners, she wrote. He was in huge battles where tens of thousands perished and where cities and towns were burned to the ground.

Jews made up 40% of Vilnas population at the time, and the city was known as the Jerusalem of the North, a center for the Jewish Enlightenment with more than 100 synagogues and places of study. Some Jews were religious, others secular, some embraced the promise of Zionism and a new life in Palestine, others devoted themselves to socialism or communism. Children attended a variety of schools, including Polish public schools, and in the summers, families headed to resorts and to summer camps.

"Autobiography of Beba Epstein." Beba Epstein wrote her autobiography during the 1933-'34 school year at the Sofia Gurevich school in Vilna, Poland.

Accompanying her story are others written in the 1930s for contests sponsored by YIVO and collected in Awakening Lives: Autobiographies of Jewish Youth in Poland Before the Holocaust. More than 600 were submitted, showing the variety of the young peoples experiences, though only about half survived the destruction of World War II.

Ive heard that they used to eat with silver spoons, a 22-year-old unemployed glass factory worker wrote of his fathers wealthy family. A member of a Zionist youth group who had tried unsuccessfully to emigrate to Palestine, he lived in poverty, often with little to eat and his fathers earnings going to doctors.

Another young man, a 20-year-old who was a member of the socialist party, wrote, My mother tells me that on the day I started to learn to walk, the Bolsheviks arrived. It was a beautiful day, and I was taking my first steps, chasing a rooster around the yard. Just then a hail of shrapnel and bullets rained down on our town, striking all the roofs with a great crash.

The collection is rich in photographs, film clips, maps and historical artifacts. The musical prodigy Jascha Heifetz, a Vilna native, appears in a portrait as a child playing the violin in 1908. Police report on Jewish revolutionaries when Vilna was part of the Russian empire in 1899 to 1900, while a notice details the theft of cows from the old age home in the 1920s. A card from 1939 celebrates Rosh Hashanah or the new year.

Jonathan Brent, YIVOs executive director, has long wanted to make YIVO's collection more accessible to people around the world. The project to digitize it and recreate as much of the pre-war archives and library as possible began in 2015, but with documents in Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, German and Lithuanian, translating 1.5 million pages for a general audience was not feasible, so the idea of a museum was born, he said.

Through these documents you learn about actual lives, actual communities, he told a United Nations conference on combatting anti-Semitism last year.

They bring alive social, political and religious conflicts, the books people read and the movies they saw, their school assignments and their ambitions and "the religious aspirations of the communities that had existed for hundreds and hundreds of years," he said.

Putting the material online is especially important as anti-Semitism flares up in the United States and elsewhere. The Anti-Defamation League's annual tracking of anti-Semitism showed more incidents in 2019 than in any other year, up 12% over the year before. They included three deadly assaults: by a white supremacist on the Chabad of Poway, California; on a grocery store in Jersey City, New Jersey; and at a Hanukkah party at the home of a rabbi in Monsey, New York.

Anti-Semitism is at the core of the white supremacist ideology, and helps to fuel other forms of hate, including Islamophobia and misogyny, said Vlad Khaykin, the ADL's national director of programs on anti-Semitism.

To combat anti-Semitism, it is key to show the diversity among Jews, whether race, color, class or background and also experience with anti-Semitism,he said.

When you treat Jews as a monolith, it makes it a lot easier to stereotype Jews, he said.

Beba Epstein's account can open up the lost world of the prewar Jewish community, said the Lithuanian ambassador to the United Nations, Audra Plepyte.

That it is online is important to teach young people in particular, a counter-narrative to the anti-Semitism on the internet, she said.

"One small document can be a source of inspiration, she said.

Beba and her husband, Lee, with their grandson Noah.

When Beba Epsteins autobiography was discovered in 2017, many people, among them Brent, assumed she had died in the Holocaust. But then The New York Times wrote about the find and featured Bebas photograph and with that came a call from a Michael Leventhal of Los Angeles, California.

"We looked at it and we were like, 'Oh my God,'" Leventhal said.

That is because Beba Epstein was his mother. Not only had she survived but she had made way to an uncle in America, had married another migr from Poland, Elias Lee Leventhal, and had made a home in Pacific Palisades, California. She earned a bachelors degree when she was 58, and became a social worker for Jewish Family Services welcoming new immigrants, many of them Jews from the Soviet Union, until she was about 70.

She loved Chopin and Mozart and was incredibly proud of Jascha Heifetz, the musician. "He was from Vilna, you know," Leventhal said at her memorial service.

But his mother struggled to be happy, to appreciate the life she made with her husband for her children. He son used to tell her, There was a group of people who tried to kill you over 60 years ago.Youre still here, and theyre all gone.And look what youve created.

Page from Auschwitz Block 8 Logbook. Concentration camp logbooks like this one were used to document prisoners that entered the camp. On each page there are lists of each prisoner that entered with information including their identification number, ethnicity (Pole, Jew, etc.), departure date (code for murdered), and name. Many of the names on these pages are crossed out meaning that these prisoners were murdered by the Nazis.

When Vilna was invaded by the Germans, and the citys Jews were confined to a ghetto, her family sent her to live at a farmhouse in the countryside. She could pass for Polish, she said later for an interview for the University of California, Los Angeles, Holocaust Testimonies Project. But when she lost touch with her family, she was smuggled into the ghetto to find that all of them her parents, her sister, Esye, a piano player and dancer, a brother Mote who loved horses, the youngest, Khayeml, whom in the autobiography she had described as chubby and adorable and just learning to talk had perished.

Beba Epstein went on to survive two years in the ghetto and another two years in labor camps, including the Kaiserwald concentration camp and the Stutthof extermination camp. She cleaned for the Gestapo and worked in a munitions plant and surreptitiously listened to the radio for the underground.

Cable from Sweden. Cable that Paul Olberg, a friend of Lasar Epstein (Bebas uncle), sent him when he found Beba in Sweden. Lasar had asked Paul to locate Beba so he could make contact with his niece. It contains Bebas contact information in Sweden.

When she was finally freed, after a harrowing trip on a ship during which her cousin drowned, she had typhoid and weighed 74 pounds. She recovered in Sweden and eventually found an uncle in the United States with the help of The Forward newspaper. It published names of survivors which were read aloud in Israel, and a friend of the uncle happened to hear hers.

Her experience during the Holocaust was so unique, Ziulkoski said. She didn't have a savior. She essentially saved herself. She went through this by herself."

"She was hidden with a family, she was in the ghetto, she was in concentration camps, the whole of different experiences in one persons life," she said.

Rachel Knopfler, a teacher at the Girls Academic Leadership Academy in Los Angeles, will use the material with her seventh-grade English students, the autobiography and the primary sources accompanying it.

Knopfler, whose grandmother and great-grandmother survived the Holocaust together in Auschwitz-Birkenau, said she wished she had been introduced to the period through something like Beba Epstein's writings rather than as she was, through horrifying pictures and stories. The YIVO exhibit is accurate, relies on primary documents, but is not traumatizing, she said.

Teaching the Holocaust is not about shock value, she said. What we're doing is were teaching tolerance.

That is especially important now, given todays resurgence of anti-Semitism, the Proud Boys chanting Jews will not replace us, in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year, and the U.S. Capitol rioter, Robert Keith Packer of Newport News, Virginia, wearing a Camp Auschwitz shirt. Too many young people are becoming desensitized to the Holocaust, which makes the photograph of Packer so vile and scary, Knopfler said.

Khaykin, a refugee himself from the former Soviet Union, said one fear is that anti-Semitism will become cool and so the ADL is looking at ways to fight back against viral videos on TikTok and elsewhere. He said he was not surprised that anti-Semitism was on the rise, but was dismayed that political leaders were not speaking out more forcefully.

It is incumbent on them to use their bully pulpit to push back, he said.

Beba, her daughter-in-law, Sharon, her son, Michael, her daughter, Mary and her husband, Lee, at Beba and Lees 50th wedding anniversary.

Robert Sandler teaches a course on Jewish history at Stuyvesant High School in New York City. In other years, he would have taken his students on a walking tour of the Lower East Side of Manhattan, once an enclave for Jewish immigrants, and to visit YIVO and the exhibits on display there. This year they instead visited pre-war Vilna virtually.

Later he asked his students which chapters of Beba Epstein's life they would chose to most engage other teenagers. Jewish, Catholic and Muslims, as diverse as New York City, some of them immigrants themselves, they juxtaposed the material about her life and the monstrosity of the Holocaust, the streetscape of Vilna and Jewish communities around the world with the ghettos and death camps.

That her essay has been published online now, after the Trump administration closed doors to refugees, was particularly well-timed, her son said.

View Beba Leventhal's oral testimony of the Holocaust later in her life through the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum here.

Thats something that directly bears on my motherss life experience, he said. The idea that maybe theres a lesson to be learned there and that she would be part of that lesson would be something that I think would thrill her.

Beba Epstein's grandson Noah Leventhal wrote about reading her autobiography after she had died. He had not known her whole story while she was alive. He was missing the child's perspective the essay offered.

"And now I have been gifted a book, a book through which to peer into the life of someone I thought I knew. Each new perspective came with the turn of a page, an experience I hope my readers will share. I wish I could have spoken to my grandmother, not the woman she was after she came out of the war, but the little girl she was before it started."

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With Anti-Semitic Attacks Surging, the Writing of a Fifth-Grader in Prewar Poland Teaches Tolerance - NBC4 Washington

Fired Former Leader of Disaster Nonprofit Says He Was Let Go Over Diversity Efforts – The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Posted By on February 16, 2021

Today: How to Win Grants to Advance Racial Equity

Join our webinar.

A partnership of investors, a nonprofit, a developer, and a church in Los Angeles are building housing for homeless people at a fraction of the time and cost that government-subsidized projects usually take. A $100 million-plus private-equity fund, with Kaiser Permanente as the largest contributor, is providing the financing, which allows the developer to skip the two- or three-year process of getting tax credits and securing "layers of financing from multiple government and private sources." The venture's first project will house and provide support for 20 homeless people, with a caseworker living on the premises. (Los Angeles Times)

The Chronicle of Philanthropy's list of 2020's biggest donors is a reminder that much of philanthropy is opaque, which makes it more difficult to have informed policy debates about inequality. A scrupulous accounting of donations that avoids double-counting must sift through gifts to nonprofits and money sent to charitable vehicles. But sometimes they are duplicative, and with the secrecy surrounding some transfers to foundations or other funds such as Jeff Bezos's $10 billion pledge to his Earth Fund it is impossible to know how much money is really being shifted from the billionaires to charity. (Vox)

In last summer's tumult over racial injustice, many museums vowed to diversify their staffs, boards, and collections, but several months later, it's difficult to judge how those programs are going in many institutions. For example, many museums will not say how much funding they've put behind diversity and inclusion efforts. Some say specific spending is hard to measure because it's across all departments, and others say money is not a good yardstick. Larger museums with major backers and fat endowments have been able to pour more funds into the programs. The most common approaches have been staff training, goals for diversifying boards, headhunting for diversity officers, and buying more works from artists from underrepresented groups. But money will matter: Staff at the J. Paul Getty Museum have complained that bosses are adding these efforts to their workload without offering more resources to get them done. (Artnet News)

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Fired Former Leader of Disaster Nonprofit Says He Was Let Go Over Diversity Efforts - The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Solano sheriffs staff accused of supporting anti-government militia group – East Bay Times

Posted By on February 16, 2021

Independent news website Open Vallejo says a handful of Solano County Sheriffs Office employees, including one with a famous brother and another recently elected to the Vacaville City Council, have supported right-wing anti-government militia group the Three Percenters.

Sgt. Daniel Cully Pratt, brother of actor Chris Pratt, said that cant be further from the truth.

In response to the recent article implying that I am linked or affiliated with a militia group. I am not a member, associated, nor do I condone extremist, radical, or anti-government views, he said in a statement released Tuesday night. I do not support hate or racism towards anybody. I do not condone violent or seditious behavior.

Over the past 25 years I have served the country in the U.S. Army and my community as a law enforcement officer. As a veteran and public servant, I took an oath to protect the rights within the Constitution. I love and am proud to serve the Solano County community.

The picture taken in October 2016, linked to said article depicts symbols, at the time believed to be strictly in support of the 2nd Amendment and Pro-America not in any way extremist anti-government views. I am disheartened that a photo taken in 2016 is now being used to link my family name to a radical attack on the US Capitol in 2021 and disparage work that I have done in and for the community trying to bring people together.

Thank you to those that have reached out in support. I will continue the path to spread positivity and unity within my community. This is the only statement I will be making in regards to this misleading allegation.

The Open Vallejo investigation charges that Cully Pratt, through social media platforms and his side woodworking business, promoted extremist imagery. The probe also found that Pratt made a gun rack with such imagery for Sgt. Roy Stockton, who reportedly also sold items with similar symbols through his own side business.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, the Three Percenters falsely believe that just 3% of Americans fought against the British during the Revolutionary War and gained liberty for all. At least one Three Percenter was reportedly arrested in the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Reached by Open Vallejo, Stockton, a new Vacaville city councilman, disavowed political violence.

I strongly condemn the violent and racist views of these extreme right, militia, and anti-government groups, Stockton said to the outfit. I believe that law enforcement officers and other public officials cannot keep their oaths to uphold the Constitution if they are associated with any extremist or anti-government groups.

Solano County Sheriff Tom Ferrara could not be reached for comment, though he released a press statement of his own.

I want to set the record straight about allegations that have been made against several of my employees. Last week, a local news organization ran a story that stated the employees were far-right extremists, said Ferrara in the statement. The reporter who wrote the story reviewed their personal social media accounts and highlighted social media posts that featured symbols representing the group called Three Percenters. The reporter then identified additional employees who were friends and made similar accusations.

I want to be clear the employees targeted in this article all serve thisagency and this community with passion and dedication. I am not aware of one instance where any of these employees acted in a manner that was portrayed in this article. When weinitially got inquiries about this story, I had personal conversations with the employees in question because itisimportant to me that thewomen and menwho workfor Solano County Sheriffs Office are people of character and uphold the high standards I have set for this Office.

The employees told me that their intention was to support the 2nd amendment and the U.S. Constitution. As we have seen with many other symbols, the Three Percenter logo has recently been linked to the rioters who broke into the U.S. Capitol. None of these employees were present for, nor do they support extremist organizations. Our office denounces any extremist organization. And if there is ever a time when a member of our office is displaying support to overthrow the government it will be dealt with swiftly.

This is a pivotal moment in our nations history and for law enforcement in general. There is distrust of our profession. It is deeply important to me as Sheriff and for our Office to collaborate with our community and listen to their concerns. We are continually evaluating our guidelines and practices. What has not and will not change is that I expect every member of this agency to treat every member of this community equally and with the utmost respect.

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Solano sheriffs staff accused of supporting anti-government militia group - East Bay Times

Veteran Sports CEO Ahron Cohen Joins the ADvantage Sports Tech Fund – Business Wire

Posted By on February 16, 2021

PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Experienced sports chief executive officer Ahron Cohen has joined the ADvantage Sports Tech Fund, a global leader in early-stage sports investing backed leAD and OurCrowd, as a venture partner. Armed with a specialized understanding of the business of sports, Cohen the former President and CEO of the Arizona Coyotes brings an experienced operator perspective in developing partnerships and commercial opportunities for ADvantages expanding global portfolio.

Working with the ADvantage team allows me to provide meaningful operational support to a growing portfolio of highly innovative technology companies, side by side with some of the industrys leading investors, said Cohen, who was widely recognized as the youngest CEO in major U.S. professional sports when he took over the Coyotes in July 2018. Before joining the Coyotes as general counsel in 2015, Cohen worked for the Minnesota Vikings NFL franchise.

Based in Phoenix, Arizona, Cohen brought operational excellence and innovation to the team while CEO. He achieved franchise-record increases in virtually every business category during his time at the Coyotes, including ticket sales, corporate sponsorships, TV ratings, premium seating, merchandise and food and beverage. During his time with the Coyotes, the organization was widely recognized as a best-in-class franchise for fan experience, including a Top 3 ranking in the NHL by J.D. Power & Associates for overall customer satisfaction results. Cohen is also responsible for closing the largest non-naming rights sponsorship deal in franchise history. Cohen was the recipient of the Sports Business Journal 40 Under 40 Award in 2020, the Phoenix Business Journal 40 Under 40 Award in 2019, and the Anti-Defamation Leagues Torch of Liberty Award in 2019 for his commitment to the Phoenix community.

"Adding a seasoned operator of Ahrons caliber to the team is highly complementary to both us and our portfolio companies, who do business with many of the largest leagues and media operators across the world, said Jeremy Pressman, the Founding Partner of ADvantage. Drafting Ahron to our all-star team further strengthens ADvantage's ability to provide strategic value to our cutting-edge global portfolio."

Cohen joins an ADvantage team that includes former NBA all-star and Olympic gold medalist Michael Redd, entrepreneur and venture capitalist Christoph Sonnen, and investment principal and great grandson of Adi Dassler, Alex Bente.

It is a true privilege to join this exceptional ADvantage team, Cohen added. I was immediately captivated by the teams vision, investment philosophy and caliber of existing portfolio companies. Alex, Jeremy and the entire team have done a tremendous job positioning ADvantage as a market leader at the forefront of the rapidly accelerating sports technology world and I look forward to helping build upon this success. I am especially honored to be a part of an organization dedicated to advancing the global sports industry in the legacy of one of its greatest pioneers, Adi Dassler.

# # #

About ADvantage Sports Tech Fund

The ADvantage fund is a joint venture between leAD Sports, a globally leading sports tech investment platform created by the grandchildren of Adi Dassler, the founder of adidas, and Israels most active venture investor, OurCrowd. The fund builds on Adi Dasslers legacy of constant sports innovation and invests in early-stage technology companies fundamentally changing the world of sports, fitness, esports and media. Since inception, the fund has established itself as one of the leading investors in sports tech with backing from several institutional investors, family offices, and private investors, including former NBA all-star and Olympic gold medalist Michael Redd.

For more information visit: https://www.advantagesportsfund.com

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Veteran Sports CEO Ahron Cohen Joins the ADvantage Sports Tech Fund - Business Wire

Shoah survivor, 80, and son reportedly ‘punched in the head’ on London bus – Jewish News

Posted By on February 16, 2021

An 80-year-old Holocaust survivor and her rabbi son were allegedly beaten up in an attack on a bus in north London on Tuesday, according to reports from Jewish neighbourhood watch volunteers.

The incident in Stoke Newington was reported in a tweet from the Shomrim community protection team, alleging the female perpetrator to have said: I hate you Jews. Its not your place. You took our money.

The mother and son were reportedly punched in the head, according to the Shomrim report, with the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) describing it as an unprovoked attack.

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In a statement, the CAA which pursues civil action against alleged anti-Semites said the perpetrator threw the rabbis hat to the floor during the assault. It added that the Holocaust survivor had been left traumatised.

The incident occurred around 14.45 on Tuesday on a 76 bus travelling from Stoke Newington to Stamford Hill, according to the CAA.

Passengers pleaded with the bus driver to stop, as the incident took place as they were driving by a police station, but he allegedly refused, said the CAA.

This is yet another unprovoked act of violence against members of the Jewish community going about their day, said a spokesman.

Transport for London must explain why the bus driver took no action, allowing the abuse to go on despite the violence and the protests of other passengers, and the assailant must quickly be identified and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

Both the Metropolitan Police and Transport for London have been approached for comment.

__

If you have any more information, please contact the police on 101 or Stamford Hill Shomrim on 0300 999 0123, quoting reference number:CAD4563 9/2/21.

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Shoah survivor, 80, and son reportedly 'punched in the head' on London bus - Jewish News

‘Amazing detective work’ reunites best friends thought murdered in the Holocaust – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 16, 2021

When they parted ways in 1939, two Jewish girls from Berlin promised to keep in touch. One family fled to Chile, while the other made its way to the United States via Shanghai.

Eighty-two years after the nine-year old girls said goodbye in a German schoolyard, Ana Mara Wahrenberg and Betty Grebenschikoff connected with each other again on Zoom. The unexpected reunion was facilitated by Holocaust testimony indexer Ita Gordon, whose sharp memory linked the women.

In her [USC Shoah Foundation] testimony, Betty said she had been actively searching for her long-lost friend for her entire life; she even specifically mentions Ana Maras name in the hopes that this will help her find her best childhood friend, said Rachael Cerrotti, who works as a creative producer for the foundation.

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Founded by Steven Spielberg, the USC Shoah Foundations archive has more than 55,000 video testimonies from survivors and witnesses of genocide. After hearing Wahrenberg speak at a virtual Kristallnacht event, Gordon made the connection between Grebenschikoffs testimony given to the foundation 24 years ago and Wahrenberg.

What followed was a series of phone calls between USC Shoah Foundation and the Museo Interactivo Judio de Chile, where Ana Mara has long been involved in a range of activities, said Cerrotti.

We needed to be absolutely certain that we were correct in believing that these two woman were childhood friends, said Cerrotti. Ita Gordons research proved to be done impeccably well and soon enough we connected with Betty and looped in the Florida Holocaust Museum, where Betty is a regular speaker, said Cerrotti.

After more than 80 years of believing the other had perished in the Holocaust, the women connected virtually in November. The Zoom gathering concluded with members of both families lifting glasses for a champagne toast lchaim.

It was so natural for them, said Lucas Kirschman, one of Grebenschikoffs seven grandchildren. They picked back up and they were talking about random stuff, like no big deal And its almost like language could have been a barrier, but it absolutely wasnt at all. Ive never heard my grandmother speak German before, ever, said Kirschman after the reunion.

In separate interviews with The Times of Israel, Ana Mara Wahrenberg and Betty Grebenschikoff spoke about their lifelong search for each other, as well as their efforts to ensure Holocaust memory endures in a world without eye-witnesses.

What has it been like to be reunited with your long-lost best friend after eight decades?

Ana Mara Wahrenberg: If it was fate or the USC Shoah Foundation that has given me back my childhood friend, I dont know, but this has been a great gift, which, at this point in my life, I am boundlessly grateful for. Betty and I have had several encounters by WhatsApp and Zoom. We talk every Sunday for about an hour we will never catch up! Our conversations are great, we still have common interests and of course many, many memories that we still share. As soon as we get out of this horrible pandemic, we will try to get together in some corner of the world.

Betty Grebenschikoff (Florida Holocaust Museum)

Grebenschikoff: My childhood friendship with Annemarie Wahrenberg ended in our Berlin schoolyard in May of 1939, where we said a tearful goodbye to each other. My family left for one of the very few open ports of Shanghai, China, while hers was still looking for safety. Over the years I looked for her but to no avail. I never forgot her and always spoke about her in my speeches, testimonies and documentaries. It is a miracle and a mitzvah for us both. She is now called Ana Maria. She remembers me by my previous name of Ilse Kohn. We are hoping for a proper live reunion in person in the fall of 2021.

Each of you wrote a book for your family members about your experiences. Can you describe your memories of Kristallnacht and fleeing Nazi Germany?

Wahrenberg: The book I wrote several years ago was meant for my family. I never thought it would attract any interest in other circles! Regarding your questions: On The Night of Broken Glass, that 9th of November 1938, the doorbell rang at my home and I found myself face to face with soldiers in black jackets, who, with a commanding voice, came to arrest my father. He spent 29 days in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

The former German Nazi concentration camp Sachsenhausen, outside Berlin, November 2012 (Matt Lebovic/The Times of Israel)

With many difficulties, only after presenting a visa to emigrate, he was released and we were able to travel to Chile. (It is a long story). All of my relatives, on my fathers and mothers sides, perished in the extermination camps. I grew up with my mother and father only, without any other relatives.

Grebenschikoff: I remember a very sheltered, happy and carefree early childhood in Berlin. All that changed in November of 1938 during the events of Kristallnacht, when my family and I sat on the floor of our apartment with lightsturned off. My sister and I were told by my parents to be very quiet so that our neighbors would think we were not at home. While the glass shattered in the streets and our synagogues burned, I finally realized what rampant anti-Semitism meant.

Schoolchildren and others brought to watch the burning of synagogue furnishings on Kristallnacht in Mosbach, Germany, November 1938 (courtesy)

That night, I understood why my Aryan friends had turned against me, threw stones at me and called me a dirty Jew. My parents, who had tried to shield us from the reality of what was happening to the Jewish people, could not do so any longer. Even in later years, it was too painful for them to talk about it. The memory of walking on the shattered glass of familiar Berlin streets a few days after the Night of Broken Glass is forever burned in my brain. Still today, decades later, that sound brings back bitter memories.

Following the riot at the US Capitol on January 6, former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger compared that day to Kristallnacht. Do you agree with this comparison?

Grebenschikoff: I totally agree with Arnold Schwarzeneggers comparison of the insurrection at the US Capital on January 6 to Kristallnacht in November 1938. While watching the attempted destruction of our democracy I could hear echoes of Nazi boots on Berlin streets, shouting mobs threatening and killing Jewish people. It definitely brought back long-buried memories, even though I was just a little girl then.

Ana Maria Wahrenberg (courtesy)

Wahrenberg: Personally, I believe that it is the small things of daily life, those little details that touch people most. For example, I tell them that when I was child in Germany, I did not have access to a swing, nor to a park, nor could I choose my friends, etc. We dont get anything in my personal opinion from feeding people with so much historical data. The important thing is to convey what it feels like to lose your rights and freedom.

Can you tell us your assessment of Holocaust education in Chile and the United States, respectively? How do you feel about the evolution of your own role in perpetuating Holocaust memory?

Wahrenberg: In general, I think that the level of education in Chile leaves much to be desired. It is still a country where many children dont have access to a good education. There are remote villages in the country, which cannot be reached and where not everyone has a computer, which is especially important during the present pandemic. The museum has tried hard and we have been successful in many places. I have traveled to several places, where the children and other people hugged me and thanked me at the end of my talk. Yes, we will continue and I will continue as long as God gives me strength, because as you say: There are few of us left, but I am convinced that my words will remain.

For me this is not a job, it is a great satisfaction to be able to reach out to young people and to see that they show empathy with me. I will leave a grain of sand in them convincing them to strive for the good. Perhaps due to my advanced age 91 and maturity, I have realized, looking back, that the most important thing in life is to plant love in our children so that Never Again this kind of hatred and persecution will occur.

Betty Grebenschikoff (Florida Holocaust Museum)

Grebenschikoff: I feel that Holocaust education and awareness has definitely improved gradually in this country [the US]. This might be due to the efforts of documenting the experiences of survivors and liberators, especially since there are not many of us left. It is now up to the second and third generation to take over what we have started.

Holocaust education has been mandated by law in many American schools. It is so important that young people are aware of this part of history and also the danger of repetition. We never thought it could happen in Germany. And then it did.

My father and my two grandfathers fought for Germany in the first world war. I still have my fathers medals. But none of that mattered as the Hitler regime came to power.

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'Amazing detective work' reunites best friends thought murdered in the Holocaust - The Times of Israel

$2,500 reward offered for information in Cal Poly fraternity hate crime investigation – KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Posted By on February 16, 2021

The San Luis Obispo Police Department is asking the community to come forward with any information about suspicious activity around the time anti-Semitic graffiti was sprawled outside a Jewish-affiliated Cal Poly fraternity.

Members of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity reported finding the swastikas and other graffiti at their house in the 200 block of California Blvd. on the morning of Saturday, Feb. 6.

Police say the vandalism has been determined to be a hate crime, and SLOPD investigators are working with Cal Poly Police and the FBI to develop leads.

Meanwhile, the Anti-Defamation League has offered a $2,500 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in this case.

The graffiti was cleaned up quickly after it was discovered. Fraternity members set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to cover the costs of clean-up, setting a goal of $1,300.

In less than a week, the fundraiser has brought in nearly $26,000.

The fraternity said the AEPi Foundation ended up covering the costs of clean-up and installation of a security camera system, so all of the money raised will now go to the JCC-Federation of San Luis Obispo and Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center.

On Thursday, Rabbi Micah Hyman, Executive Director of SLO Hillel, said the money would be used to support the SLO Jewish Community Festival of Learning, which "will be dedicated to education for all of SLO county, within the University and for our community to share not only about antisemitism and the Shoah, but about racism, intolerance and hate, by nurturing dialogue, understanding and love of humanity."

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$2,500 reward offered for information in Cal Poly fraternity hate crime investigation - KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Center to Host Prof. Havi Dreifuss, Director of Yad Vashem’s Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland, for talk on the End of the Warsaw Ghetto…

Posted By on February 16, 2021

Center to Host Prof. Havi Dreifuss, Director of Yad Vashem's Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland, fortalkon the End of the Warsaw Ghetto (March 1)

The Center for Judaic, Holocaust, and Peace Studies proudly invites the public to an online lecture byProfessor Havi Dreifuss (Tel Aviv University / Yad Vashem)live from Israel. Prof.Dreifuss'talk will center on theWarsaw Ghetto - The End (April 1942 - June 1943)"and take place onMon., March 1, from11:00am - 12:30 pm EST.

Aprofessor of Jewish history and the Head of the Institute for the History of Polish Jewry and Israel-Poland Relations at Tel Aviv University, Dr. Dreifuss also serves as the Director of the Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland at the International Institute for Holocaust Research, Yad Vashem, Israel. Her path-breaking research deals with various aspects of everyday life during the Holocaust, including the relationship between Jews and Poles, religious life in light of the Holocaust, and Jewish existence in the face of extermination.Dr. Dreifuss'"We Polish Jews"? The Relations between Jews and Poles during the Holocaust The Jewish Perspective(Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 2009) made a critically important contribution to the ongoing public and scholarly debates over the Shoah in German-occupied Poland. Her latest book, on which the talk will be based,The Warsaw Ghetto - The End (April 1942 - June 1943), just won the Shazar Prize for the Study of Jewish History.

Organized by the Center for Judaic, Holocaust, and Peace Studies, the program is co-sponsored by ASU Departments ofHistory,InterdisciplinaryStudies, and Religion and Philosophy.

Like all Center events, this online program is free of charge and open to the public. For more information, please contact the Center at 828.262.2311 orholocaust@appstate.edu. To attend,pleaseregisterhere.

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Center to Host Prof. Havi Dreifuss, Director of Yad Vashem's Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland, for talk on the End of the Warsaw Ghetto...

Reckoning with a Nazi Father – The New Yorker

Posted By on February 16, 2021

A son of the senior Nazi member Otto Wchter maintains that his father, indicted for mass murder but never tried or convicted, died an innocent man.Photograph from Alamy

In early January, a man born in the small Austrian village of Thal appeared in an eight-minute video, delivering a powerful statement on the storming of the U.S. Capitol. One thing leads to the next, he warned, emphasizing that he spoke from experience: I grew up in Austria. Arnold Schwarzeneggers defense of democracy and its institutions, assisted by his sword from Conan the Barbarian and a cinematic score, drew a parallel with the events of Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, in November, 1938, when mobs attacked Jews across the Reich, from Berlin to Vienna. The video was viewed by tens of millions around the world, but several Austrian acquaintances of mine noted that it got less play in their country than in others.

Schwarzenegger spoke personally, evoking a youth spent in the company of broken men drinking away their guilt over their participation in the most evil regime in history. They were ordinary folk, he suggested, not necessarily rabidly anti-Semitic or Nazi, who just went along. Ive never shared this so publicly, because it is a painful memory, he continued, introducing us to his own drunken, violent fathera man like so many in the neighborhood. How did Schwarzenegger explain such behavior? The pain of war wounds, or maybe what they saw or did. What they didthe words hinted at dark elements. Schwarzenegger might have said that he knew about these things because his father had been a member of the Nazi Party. It is no criticism that he didnt reveal this fact, even if the subtlety of his words meant that many viewers missed out on an individual reckoning. Such silences, often a handmaiden to the lies and lies and lies of which Schwarzenegger did speak, have, in recent years, intruded into my life with some frequency. The past in Austria, it seems, is never really embraced, even if aspects of it tend to be addressed with circumspection.

On Christmas Day, 2020, I received an e-mail from Vienna. The correspondent introduced herself as Marie-Theres Arnbom, a historian and the great-granddaughter of Robert Winterstein, in whose house she lived, in the parish of Ptzleinsdorf, on the outskirts of the city. A renowned lawyer, Winterstein served as Procurator General (chief public prosecutor) of Austria until March, 1938, when, following the Nazi takeover and the countrys incorporation into the Third Reich, he was fired, stripped of his pension, arrested (on Kristallnacht), and deported to Buchenwald, from where he never returned. His family retained a memento of his removal, a typewritten letter, dated September 14, 1938, closed with a confident but indecipherable signature. For decades, the family wondered about the identity of the writer.

Eighty years later, the mystery was solved, Arnbom wrote, thanks to my book, The Ratline. Recently published in German, and gifted to her at Christmas, the book mentioned her great-grandfather, one of the at least 16,200 Austrian civil servants removed from their posts for the wrong of being Jewish. The Suberungsaktion, or cleansing action, was implemented by the books central character, Otto Wchter, an Austrian lawyer, Nazi, and S.S. member. He fled Vienna for Berlin after leading the failed July Putsch of 1934 against Chancellor Engelbert Dollfusss government, only to return four years later, in triumph, to be appointed state secretary. It was his signature, I confirmed in my book, that graced the unhappy family heirloom.

The deciphering of the intricate signature was not, however, Arnboms reason for writing. Remarkably, she explained, Otto Wchter happened to be the grandfather of her neighbor and friend of many years. A year earlier, she and the Wchter granddaughter had attended an appearance that Id made in a Viennese theatre, unaware of the letters hidden family connections. What a strange situation, Arnbom musedWchters son, who was also named Otto, had, as a deacon at the parish church in Ptzleinsdorf, officiated at her wedding. You have known a family for so long, are on friendly terms, and suddenly there is another connection that radically changes the relationship.

The path to this reckoning in Vienna was circuitous, a consequence of an invitation I had received a decade ago. My day job is as a professor of international law and a barrister, litigating cases before international tribunals. Might you come and deliver a lecture in the Ukraine, I was asked, on cases that you have argued on crimes against humanity and genocide? I accepted and went to Lviv. This was not so much to give the talk but to find the house where my own Austrian grandfather, Leon Buchholz, was born, in 1904. Back then, the city was Lemberg, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and Ihaving a grandfather who never spoke to me of the years in Lemberg or Vienna, or wartime Paris, to where he escaped in 1939wanted to fill the gaps in the family story. These were matters of silence.

I found my grandfathers house on Szeptycki Street, and more. I learned about the events in the city and surrounding areas, under Nazi occupation, and the senior Nazis who played a key role in the exterminations. Otto Wchter was among them. His enthusiastic and efficient Viennese acts of cleansing brought rapid promotion: first as governor of Krakow, where he built the notorious ghetto; then as governor in Lemberg of the District of Galicia, where he oversaw the implementation of the Final Solution, under the guidance of Heinrich Himmler. His efforts later brought an indictment for mass murder of a hundred thousand or more Jews and Poles, including my grandfathers family in Lemberg. Hunted by the Americans, Poles, and Soviets, and the Vienna-based Simon Wiesenthal, Wchter escaped, hoping to make his way to South America along the ratline, which was later used by Adolf Eichmann, his colleague and fellow-Austrian. Wchter died in 1949, under mysterious circumstances, in a fifteenth-century hospital ward in Rome, in the shadow of St. Peters, in the arms of a Nazi-loving bishop.

The visit to Lviv prompted more research and, eventually, an introduction to Horst, the fourth of Otto and Charlotte Wchters six children. Otto was never tried or convicted, Horst liked to tell me, which meant that on his death Otto was to be considered an innocent man. That fact created a space, which came to be occupied by the silence of the family, one that allowed painful facts to be avoided, the truth to be bypassed, and reckonings put off. In due course, Horst and I made a BBC documentary, and I wrote a book, East West Street, in which Horst and his father were minor characters. At my suggestion, he deposited copies of the letters, diaries, and papers of his parents with the Holocaust Memorial Museum, in Washington, D.C., and offered me a full set, just short of nine thousand pages of love and horror on a single USB drive. To prove I am not a Nazi, he explained with a grin. The rich, dark material became the basis for a podcast series (with Stephen Fry as the voice of Otto, and Laura Linney that of Charlotte) and a second book, The Ratline, which lifted the lid on top of the Nazi couples life, and brought the introduction to Arnbom and many others like her.

These works have catalyzed an outpouring of communications that I had not expected, with many from the children and grandchildren of Nazi perpetrators, victims, and bystanders. Such readers, it turns out, are especially attentive to points of detail, and are often prompted to reach out to the author of a book by the mention of a family member or a notorious location or character. In this way, since 2016, I have received about thirty communications a month, more than a thousand in all. Over the years, I have acquired newly discovered family members (in Los Angeles), and received a myriad assortment of astonishing personal tales. There is the son of the U.S. Army man named Lucid who hunted Wchter and arrested Himmlers wife and daughter, helping himself to the Fhrers Christmas cards to the Himmlers; the cards, with Hitlers impenetrably telling signature, now reside in a quiet bungalow in Albuquerque. Or the Catholic priest from Kansas City, who sent a reminiscence about the summer of 1969, when he lodged with the Baroness, as Wchters widow styled herself, at Haus Wartenberg, her guesthouse in Salzburg, unaware that she had illicitly buried her husband in the garden. Or the ninety-two-year-old former S.S. man who went on the run with Wchter, describing how the pair followed the famous Nuremberg trial from a hiding place high in the Austrian mountainswhere the British and Americans were mostly too lazy to go up into the mountains, he added, with a grin.

Charlotte spent her final years scrubbing her husbands name out of the public domain, challenging broadcasters and others who aired calumnies about him. I do not want my children to believe that he is a war criminal who murdered hundreds of Jews, she told a journalist, in 1977. The truth about Otto Wchter disappeared into the shadows, until Horst shared the family archive. His motivation is uncertain, although it seems to be driven by instincts of openness and denial, a strange combination that nevertheless allows him to sleep in proximity of a portrait of his godfather, Arthur Seyss Inquart, the first (and brief) Chancellor of Nazi Austria, who went on to rule the Netherlands for five years and was hanged at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity. Horst, whom Ive found to be gentle and prone to be economical with uncomfortable facts and is no anti-Semite or Holocaust denier, professes a filial duty to find the good in his father. His efforts have not endeared him to the family, an extensive and diverse clan that encompasses lawyers and hoteliers, several with a deep Catholic faith, and one convert to Islam. Charlotte and Ottos children have produced twenty-three living grandchildren, and most, it seems, prefer to keep the grandfather out of the limelight. This imposes a significant burden.

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Reckoning with a Nazi Father - The New Yorker


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