Page 866«..1020..865866867868..880890..»

Grapevine, January 24, 2021: What to expect in 2021 – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on January 26, 2021

New World Disorder: Redefining National Security is the title of the three-day 14th International Conference of the Institute for National Security Studies which opens on Tuesday, January 26 with Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi and UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr. Anwar Gargash discussing IDF Strategy 2021.An academic with degrees from George Washington and Cambridge universities, before entering the UAEs economic, political and diplomatic fields, gaining prominence in all three, Gargash was a faculty member of the United Arab Emirates University for ten years. His next position was as editor of the strategic studies publications of the Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research. He was concurrently a businessman and from there branched into other fields. With the normalization of relations between the UAE and Israel, Gargash has urged Palestinians to return to the negotiating table.Lt. Gen. (ret.) Ashkenazi was a platoon commander in the Golani Brigade. He fought in the Yom Kippur War and five years later, during the Litani Operation, was wounded and left the IDF. Two years later, he was asked to return as a battalion commander, and during the 1982 Lebanon War, served as deputy commander of the Golani Brigade and commanded the forces that captured the Beaufort Castle. In 1987, he was promoted to commander and kept moving up in the ranks till 2005, when as deputy chief of staff, he officially retired from the army. However, a year later, he again was recalled, this time by then-defense minister Amir Peretz and was appointed director-general of the Defense Ministry. The following year, he was appointed chief of the general staff, a position that he held for four years before leaving the army for the last time in 2011. As a civilian, Ashkenazi is a former chairman of Shemen Oil and Gas Exploration. He was also the unpaid chairman of the Rashi Foundation, which assists underprivileged youth to realize their potential. He entered the political arena in 2019.Subjects that will be explored during the rest of the conference include: the Biden Administration; the World Between Trump and Biden; War in the Middle East: A strategic assessment for Israel 2021; How to Heal Israel; COVID-19 and the Home Front. Full details and registration are available on the INSS website. THE CONFEDERATION of General Zionists (CGZ) has elected American-Israeli entrepreneur, philanthropist, community organizer and activist David Yaari as its president and chairman of the board,Succeeding Jesse Sultanik, who will continue as an officer, along with Marlene Post, a past president of Hadassah the Womens Zionist Organization of America, the most important of the various Zionist hats she has worn. Sultanik is a grandson of the late Kalman Sultanik, who died in October 2014, at age 97, after leading the CGZ for 60 years.

cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });

Read more:
Grapevine, January 24, 2021: What to expect in 2021 - The Jerusalem Post

UC Merced Professor Who Tweeted of ‘IsraHell’ and Zionist ‘World Domination’ Will Not Teach Spring Semester After Outcry – Algemeiner

Posted By on January 26, 2021

The now-deleted antisemitic Twitter account maintained by University of California Professor Abbas Ghassemi. Photo: Screenshot.

Abbas Ghassemi, a chemical engineering professor at the University of California Merced, will not be teaching in the spring semester at the school, after outrage last month over his antisemitic social media posts, the Merced Sun-Star reported Friday.

The Twitter posts, exposed in Dec. 2020 by the Jewish News of Northern California,led to calls for Ghassemis firing and prompted an inquiry by the school, which has not yet commented on his employment status.

One post, on Dec. 13, read, the Zionists and IsraHell interest have embedded themselves in every component of the American system, media, banking, policy, commerce just a veneer of serving US interest and population everyone pretends that is the case.

Another included an image of a Zionist brain with labels such as frontal money lobe, Holocaust memory centre, self-pity gland and world domination lobe.

January 26, 2021 10:13 am

The opinions presented in this Twitter account do not represent UC Merced or the University of California, said a Dec. 29 statement from Chancellor Juan Snchez Muoz and Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Gregg A. Camfield. They were abhorrent and repugnant to us and to many of our colleagues and neighbors; they were harmful to our university, our students, and our years of work to build an inclusive and welcoming community.

The statement also promised that the school would develop programming for the upcoming semester on antisemitism, free speech and hate speech.

Jim Chiavelli, assistant vice chancellor of external relations at UC Merced, told the Sun-Star Friday thatthe associate chancellor is still evaluating partnerships for specific programming on anti-Semitism at UC Merced.

See more here:
UC Merced Professor Who Tweeted of 'IsraHell' and Zionist 'World Domination' Will Not Teach Spring Semester After Outcry - Algemeiner

Coming to terms with my year of Bashert – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on January 26, 2021

My grandmother on my fathers side was a great believer in bashert, a Yiddish term that may be interpreted as meaning stuff that was meant to be. She was convinced it ran in our family. For example, it was bashert that she and my grandfather fled pogroms in Ukraine and ended up in Pittsburgh.Fast forward to Israel some 60 years later. Fleeing America amid the social upheaval of the Vietnam War, three assassinations, black liberation, womens liberation, and the liberation of Soviet Jewry, I chose a quieter life in Israel.Segue past a few wars and decades of marital bliss, and a different sort of challenge strikes in the form of a pandemic. The world enters a year of crisis and inconceivable and many needless deaths, but there are individual exceptions to the horrible year. This is due to the undeniable influence of the ever-present, yet inscrutable bashertian factor, a sort of Ashkenazi karma.As the only American Israeli journalist who has both undergone a kidney transplant and published a debut novel since the plague began, I could say dayenu and sheheheyanu and be satisfied. But just as my grandparents prospered beyond reasonable expectations in Pittsburgh, I have prospered in Jerusalem.How to get rich in Jerusalem I first came to the park in San Simon in 1968, a penniless college student hitchhiking through Israel on his first visit.Today I come to my neighborhood park with my 11 grandchildren.Actually, number 12, a girl, is expected in May. The bashertian year began with the birth of granddaughter number 5, about a week before I was blessed with my transplant. I held her in the delivery room for the first and last time until she was seven months old. Today, more than two weeks after my second inoculation, I can kiss and hug her, plague or no plague. We Zoomed tonight for the last time. Kisses and hugs must be delivered in person.No bashertian year would be complete without at least one verifiable miracle. Ours was the recovery of a loved one from a second bout of cancer, thank God.

cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });

Read the original here:
Coming to terms with my year of Bashert - The Jerusalem Post

‘Hate Never Disappears. It Just Takes a Break for a While.’ Why the U.S. Capitol Attack Makes Holocaust Remembrance Day More Important Than Ever -…

Posted By on January 26, 2021

Among the most shocking images from the Jan. 6 insurrection on Capitol Hill were pictures of a man wearing a sweatshirt that said Camp Auschwitz and work brings freedom. Its an anti-Semitic reference to the Nazi concentration camp and extermination center where over 1 million Jewish people died or were murdered during the Holocaust.

The hoodie-wearer Robert Keith Packer was arrested in Virginia a week after the attack on Jan. 13. Two days later, at an emotional press conference, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi choked up when she singled him out as one figure that stood out to her the most after watching so many disgusting images.

To see this punk with that shirt on and his anti-Semitism that he has bragged aboutbe part of a white supremacist raid on this Capitol, requires us to have an after-action review to assign responsibility who are part of organizing it and incentivizing it, she said.

To scholars of the history of anti-Semitism and Holocaust history, however, the anti-Semitism on display was shocking, but not new. To them it was the latest example in a long history of the association between white supremacist groups and pro-Nazi sentiment in America that predates World War II. In fact, in the 1930s, many Americans admired aspects of Adolf Hitlers agenda, and pro-Nazi Americans rallied at Madison Square Garden.

More than 75 years after the end of World War II, the Jan. 6 Capitol Hill attack became the latest reminder of how Nazi ideas still endure. For this years International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Wednesdaywhich marks the Jan. 27, 1945, liberation of Auschwitz and has become an annual occasion to remember the 6 million Jewish people who died during the HolocaustTIME reached out to Steve Ross, professor of History at the University of Southern California who is writing a book called The War Against Hate: American Resistance to White Supremacy After 1945, to understand where the insurrection fits in the history of anti-Semitism in the U.S. and American Nazi groups.

What is the significance of the Jan. 6 insurrection on Capitol Hill as we approach International Holocaust Remembrance Day?

That a President a now former Presidentlies to the American people, lies to himselfis not willing to accept the basic premise of American democracy, which is a peaceful transfer of power. What it suggests to us is that hate has never left our country. Its just simply gone underground at different points and then has reemerged when someone at the top allows it to flourish. And that started I would argue, in Charlottesville, when Trump announced that there were good people on both sides, and when the President of the United States then also encourages those people to come to D.C.

This is why we need a Holocaust Remembrance Day because these battles are constantly being waged over and over again. Hate never disappears. It just takes a break for a while.

Where does the attack fit in the history of anti-Semitism in America?

My mother was in Auschwitz, and my father was in Dachau. When I saw the Camp Auschwitz sweatshirt, to say it repulsed me, turned my stomach, would be an understatement. The 6MWE T-shirts [seen at past rallies] stands for Six Million Wasnt Enough. I would say that this is not new, that there is a continuous line of far-right groups like the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers, that goes back to 1945, and the end of World War II.

We are so enamored with the Good War and the Greatest Generation, the myth that all these men and some women from different backgrounds went off to war, and it brought a greater sense of American democracy, tolerance and diversity I think thats exaggerating. They came to respect one another, and at the very least, felt when they came back from war, everyone deserved to live a life of not being in fear and being able to prosper.

But thats only one half of the story. There were a lot of Americans, and we saw their grandchildren out there [on Jan. 6], who did not go off to war to fight Hitler and Mussolini, to fight Nazism and fascism. They went off to [World War II] simply because Japan bombed us. And in their mind, when they came back from war, they expected everything would be the same. And everything being the same means that Blacks, Jews, Catholics, minorities knew their place But when [minority groups] started demanding greater rights than they had had before the war, thats what sparked off resentment.

The book Im writing now talks about several groups that would keep reconstituting themselves through the rise of the Nazi Party in America. White supremacy meant that Blacks and Jews have not known their place, and therefore they need to be put in their place. And we saw that this has been going on since 1945, sometimes more intense, sometimes less intense. But you can draw the line right back there.

What factors from 1945 onwards are most important to the spread of white supremacy and anti-Semitism?

[During the] Cold War era, the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover allowed anti-Semitism and racism to persist. They were so fixated on left-wing communists that they paid very little attention to right-wing groups.

You had a group called the Columbians out of Atlanta in 1945 and 1946 that was expelled from the Klan for being too radical in their racial views. They wanted to exterminate all Jews and send Blacks back to Africa. J.B. Stoner by 1946 starts the Stoner Anti-Jewish Partylater renamed the Christian Anti-Jewish Partywhich also calls for the immediate extermination of Jews saying that Hitler was not efficient enough. He was involved in a whole spate of bombings of synagogues and Black churches in the late 1950s and 1960s. It was happening throughout [the U.S.] mainly in the South, but also throughout the country, in New York City, New Jersey, and on the West Coast. He also formed the National States Rights Party. He is one of the godfathers of white supremacy.

Many people dont realize that Nazis werent just abroad.

Yes, there were not only Nazi movements in the rest of the world, but in America, in New York

The National Renaissance Party in New York is the first major Nazi Party, and they, in themselves, are not so important. But what is important is its National Renaissance Bulletin that becomes the main vehicle for fascists and Nazis throughout the world. They communicate through this bulletin with Nazi leaders who had fled before they got arrested, with those who had been arrested, with those who had avoided arrest. And I find this correspondence throughout the world. This [publication] was kind of Nazi central for the world during the 50s. It was the kind of Twitter of its time, but without the instant [communication].

And the interesting thing, of course, is the person who was put in charge of all the correspondence because he could read and write German was a man named Mana Truhill who was a spy for the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League. He was working undercover for them, and he helped expose all these people.

Tell me more about the people who exposed anti-Semitic white supremacists in the post-war era.

Three groups in New York, the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee and a group called the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League said no one in government is paying any attention in a serious way. And they started running spy operations, which they continued from 1945 to 1979, to protect Jews and Blacks from white supremacists, not just in the South, but in New York, the Midwest and the West Coast. And they were the ones who managed to go undercover. In 1946, they would break the Columbians apart by sending undercover agents who penetrated the group, secretly photographed evidence, sent it to the Attorney General of Georgia, who prosecuted the Columbians and shut them down. And that was a great moment of victory until a number of the Columbians went off and formed other groups.

And thats what you will see. All these different groups that we have nowwhether its the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepersfrom 1945 onwards, what I have seen is whenever they are finally put down by the government, the leaders reconstitute themselves and form a different group.

Have you noticed trends for when these anti-Semitic white supremacist groups are active from 1945 onwards?

When you get these Red Scares going on in Congress in particular, it allows these right-wing groups to come out from under the rocks proclaiming themselves as true patriots who are going to save America from the left.

This period of the post-war was a period when Southern politicians, in many ways, ruled the Senate. You had a lot of Southern senators who were also Klan members, so theyre not going to crack down against any of these right-wing groups. The Senate [held] hearings on communists and Hollywood communists around America, and in the mid-1950s, they hold a hearing on fascism and fascists for a day or so, and they announced theres no threat of fascism in America, period. But they continue talking about the threat of the left-wing.

And thats part of the legacy. We are able to hide all the anti-democratic groups under this rubric of fighting to save America from the communist threat. And whenever you talk about the communist threat, its code also for the Jewish threat because [these conspiracists falsely believe] Jews are both controlling the worlds capital, controlling the banking system and trying to undermine and destroy capitalism. So youve got it at both ends, propping it up to destroying it. So again, hate is not a rational thing and the kind of explanation for hate is not always a rational explanation.

Are there any myths or misconceptions about the association between anti-Semitism and white supremacist groups in America that youd like to debunk?

One of the questions I got about my book proposal was, But these are small numbers of people. They came, they disappeared. Are they really that important? And I would argue if you have made a whole group of Americans live a life where they are afraid every day, they have succeeded. I dont care if theres only 1,000 of them they have had an impact on American life through today.

It doesnt stop unless our political leaders speak out against itright from the top. One of the things I find tragic is for decades, very few political leaders spoke out against it. Speaking out against racism or anti-Semitism wasnt going to win you votes. And if it didnt win you votes, forget about the morality of it all. It was about the practicality of it all. And thats where I see it festers to this day. And what I would argue is American politicians have had several key moments when they could change the way the world was, and they have failed that every single time because we failed to confront white supremacy, racism and anti-Semitism. We had a chance after the Civil War, and we failed. We had a chance after World War II, and we failed. And we have a chance again, right now, in the wake of everything that has happened. None of this is going to change unless we actually confront our own history and confront it right now, not just for the past, but for the present.

For your security, we've sent a confirmation email to the address you entered. Click the link to confirm your subscription and begin receiving our newsletters. If you don't get the confirmation within 10 minutes, please check your spam folder.

Write to Olivia B. Waxman at olivia.waxman@time.com.

Continued here:

'Hate Never Disappears. It Just Takes a Break for a While.' Why the U.S. Capitol Attack Makes Holocaust Remembrance Day More Important Than Ever -...

Holocaust Survivor Q&A on Feb. 11 via Zoom | University of Arkansas – University of Arkansas Newswire

Posted By on January 26, 2021

Pieter Kohnstam

Pieter Kohnstam, Holocaust survivor.

According to a recent national study, Arkansas students rank last in the nation in their knowledge of the Holocaust. In an effort to combat this, Holocaust Survivor will be speaking to the University of Arkansas to share his testimony as a survivor of the Holocaust. Pieter Kohnstam's neighbor was Anne Frank, and Kohmstam now volunteers with the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect to carry on her legacy.

RSVP for this incredible event, co-sponsored by: Hillel, Students with Refugees, Graduate and Professional Student Congress (GPSC) Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Jewish Studies Program, Residence Interhall Congress (RIC) and the Diversity and Inclusion Student Council (DISC).

https://uark.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUtdOihqT8iGt20nWUhLgF265TvDAw1DJrJ?fbclid=IwAR1cpeh_tcys3Vmy1OIcKRXig771fl5wLWOw5stPUkG9s22HM4pP8YNB27M

Please join us for this rare opportunity to learn from and engage with a Holocaust Survivor. Go to a website with Kohmstam's story.

Excerpt from:

Holocaust Survivor Q&A on Feb. 11 via Zoom | University of Arkansas - University of Arkansas Newswire

How Shanghai saved thousands of Jews from the Holocaust – CNA

Posted By on January 26, 2021

SHANGHAI: As an infant Kurt Wick escaped almost certain death in a Nazi concentration camp by taking refuge in Shanghai, a little-known sanctuary for thousands of Jews fleeing the Holocaust.

Now 83, he has spent the last two decades spreading the word about how the Chinese city became an unlikely safe haven from Adolf Hitler's "Final Solution".

"They saved 20,000 Jews and if it wasn't for that, I wouldn't be able to talk to you now," says Vienna-born Wick, who was taken by his parents on a ship from the port of Trieste for the long voyage east.

"I would have been one of the ashes in Auschwitz, like my other family."

Wednesday (Jan 27)is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, marking the anniversary of the 1945 liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp.

Six million Jews perished during the worst genocide in human history but Wick and six other members of his family were able to escape Europe for Shanghai because it was one of the very few destinations that did not require an entry visa.

"People should know about it because it was the only place in the world in 1939 that opened its gates," Wick said by telephone from his home in London.

"Even many Jews don't know about it."

Shanghai was a strange and faraway land for the European Jews, and would soon be completely occupied by an increasingly aggressive Imperial Japan.

They got support from a small but wealthy number of Jews who had been in the city since the 19th century and helped build a bustling community.

Historical accounts likened the atmosphere to a small town in Austria or Germany.

Life was nevertheless hard and after World War II ended in 1945, Shanghai's Jewish population declined sharply as they returned home or embarked on new lives elsewhere.

"SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP"

Chinese authorities are clearly eager for Shanghai's history as a safe harbour for Jews to get more exposure.

In 2007 the government-run Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum opened in Hongkou, a district that once contained the so-called "Shanghai Ghetto".

The site of a former synagogue, the museum reopened last month after a major expansion that tripled its size.

The centrepiece of the museum is a wall listing the names of thousands of Jews who temporarily made the city home in the 1930s and 1940s.

Much is made at the museum of how the Jews and Chinese, themselves suffering the ravages of war, helped one another get by during the Japanese occupation.

It also highlights how the Jews never faced any prejudice from the Chinese - an assertion backed up by Wick.

But he is also keen to stress that the Japanese, although allied to Nazi Germany, were also not anti-Semitic and it was "mainly the Japanese" who allowed them refuge.

Chen Jian, the museum's curator, said there was a "special relationship" between Shanghai and the Jews which pre-dates the refugees and continues to this day.

"Although decades have passed and this period of history is a long time ago, some of the refugees and their descendants have maintained ... the very deep friendship between us," he said.

UNTOLD STORY

Rabbi Shalom Greenberg, co-director of the Shanghai Jewish Center, said the story of Jews finding shelter in Shanghai remained untold for decades and still receives little attention.

"The story that was told was about those who did not survive, about their terrible situation, the terrible thing that happened in Europe," said Greenberg.

"The story of the survivors, in general, was almost not told."

None of the refugees remain in Shanghai but there is still a small yet active Jewish community of about 2,000 people.

Prejudice of any kind against them is unheard of, says Greenberg, 49, at the century-old Ohel Rachel Synagogue.

"This is one of the very few places in the world that when you walk on the street and you hear two people behind you saying in the local language, 'This person is Jewish', you are not afraid." he said.

"This land never, never had anti-Semitism."

Read more here:

How Shanghai saved thousands of Jews from the Holocaust - CNA

International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2021: ‘I Only Wanted to Live’ by Mimmo Calopresti – University of Arkansas Newswire

Posted By on January 26, 2021

The U of A's Italian Program is partnering with the Instituto di cultura italiana in Los Angeles for International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2021.

The Instituto has organized a virtual screening of noted Italian director Mimmo Calopresti's filmI Only Wanted to Live (2006).

This documentary chronicles the Holocaust as experienced in Italy, from the racial laws Mussolini enacted in 1938 through the German invasion in 1943 and the liberation of Auschwitz in 1945.

The experiences are made personal through the use of testimony from the archive of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education. Nine Italian citizens, all survivors of Auschwitz, share their stories; their testimonies are woven among personal and historical photographs and additional archival footage.

Accompanied by an exclusive video introduction by the director,Mimmo Calopresti,and remarks by the Consul General of Italy in Los Angeles,Silvia Chiave.

To access the film, you do need to register. The event is free and open to the public; please share widely.

The film is available from6p.m. PST (8 p.m. Central)Wednesday, Jan.27,to midnight PST Sunday, Jan.31.

Follow this link:

International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2021: 'I Only Wanted to Live' by Mimmo Calopresti - University of Arkansas Newswire

Her family survived the Holocaust, but terror found them in their new home – The Gazette

Posted By on January 26, 2021

Vera and Pista Vadas survived the horrors of the Holocaust in Hungary, successfully got out of Hungary when a Communist government took over and built new lives and raised a family in Canada. They thought they had left strife and terror behind.

Then, one day something shattered their sense of security.

In 2010 we found a wooden crate under our lake house north of Toronto it was quite new, the contents were absolutely gruesome. It was the most grizzly things you could ever imagine the fresh remains of a murder victim, their daughter Deborah Levison said. This discovery really rocked my family.

She set out to document her familys story in The Crate, weaving the horrors of her parents past with the family grappling with this new horror in the present.

She will tell their story as the featured speaker for the Thaler Holocaust Remembrance Funds virtual commemoration of International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Jan. 27.

The presentation will begin at 6 p.m. Registration is required; learn more at HolocaustEducate.org.

By the time they brought the murderer to trial and convicted him it was 2013, Levison said. It was a story that was crying out to be told; here was this murder victim, this young woman who no longer had a voice.

She also wanted to put what had happened in the context of her parents experiences.

I knew that in order to put the whole story into context, in order for readers to understand why it had such an impact, I had to tell the story of my parents past. They were Holocaust survivors who thought they had finally found sanctuary, she said. To have this act of just horrendous violence and evil really taint, really defile our sanctuary was traumatizing for our parents. It became the intertwining of evil in the past and evil in the present.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ADVERTISEMENT

Growing up, they didnt talk about the Holocaust, but Levison said she could always sense something was different about her family. The trauma was always with them.

I felt sort of a black shadow over our family. I knew we were different from other families, she said. We werent allowed to get angry, we never disobeyed, we were always respectful, because we always felt our parents would shatter.

In the mid-1990s, her father gave a video testimony of his story for a project by director Steven Spielberg.

They had never talked about their past to me; they wanted to protect me from everything they had gone through, Levison said. It was by watching my fathers video that I actually learned what they had gone through.

Her mother grew up in Budapest, Hungary, and her father in a small village north of the city. Then, in March 1944, Germany occupied the country. Her mothers parents were taken away her father to forced labor, her mother on a train to Auschwitz. Her mother was just 14 and ended up alone in the Budapest ghetto.

Her father was 17 when he was taken away by the Nazis for forced labor, and eventually sent to three different concentration camps.

When the last camp he was in was liberated by Allied forces in May 1945, he was on the brink of starvation, weighing less than 90 pounds. He spent 90 days in an American infirmary, recovering, before going to Budapest. There, met Levisons mother, and eventually the two married.

Her father has since died but her mother still is alive. Levison, who now lives in Connecticut, said not seeing her during the COVID-19 pandemic has been difficult.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ADVERTISEMENT

She said as the generation that lived through the Holocaust gets older and passes on, it is the duty of children of Holocaust survivors like herself to keep telling their stories.

As were losing their voices, it is incumbent on the next generation to tell the stories, to make it their responsibility to learn the stories and to preserve them write them down, get them on video, get a voice recording, she said.

She said we are not far removed from the kind of bigotry and hatred that led to the Holocaust in the first place.

Unfortunately, the themes are so timely, still. Violence and anti-Semitism and hatred are still with us its only been a few days since the attack on the Capitol with the guys wearing Camp Auschwitz T-shirts, she said. I think the themes are just very relevant for right now.

And when people see that kind of hatred, they have a duty to speak up, she added.

When you see something unjust happening, you have to step in. The opposite of love is not hate, she said. Its indifference.

Comments: (319) 398-8339; alison.gowans@thegazette.com

See the rest here:

Her family survived the Holocaust, but terror found them in their new home - The Gazette

Holocaust commission gets new life; atrocities to be recalled this week in Texas, San Antonio – San Antonio Express-News

Posted By on January 26, 2021

A recommendation to abolish the states 12-year-old Texas Holocaust and Genocide Commission has been modified to keep the organization active but under closer scrutiny by the Texas Historical Commission.

Everything is working out now, and we are still in existence, said Lynne Aronoff, chairwoman of the Holocaust commission. We believe that well emerge from this important process stronger and improved as a result.

The change comes as educators prepare for Texas Holocaust Remembrance Week, which begins Monday and runs through Friday.

A staff report released in November by the Texas Sunset Advisory Commission, which reviews state agencies every 10 years to determine whether they should stay as is, change or be eliminated, proposed dissolving the Holocaust commission, saying it has never functioned as intended, cannot show measurable benefit to the state and should be abolished.

But after receiving numerous protests including from state Sen. Jos Menndez, D-San Antonio, who authored the bill that created Remembrance Week the Sunset Commission replaced that proposal with a recommendation that the Holocaust group be brought under close oversight as an advisory committee of the Texas Historical Commission, with another sunset review set for 2031.

On ExpressNews.com: Holocaust liberator from San Antonio haunted by memories

The Legislature still must vote on the Sunset Commissions recommendation and has the ultimate say on which agency would oversee the group. The Texas Education Agency and the State Board of Education also have been mentioned as agencies that could handle oversight of the Holocaust commission.

Aronoff said shes hopeful the multiphase sunset review process will strengthen the commission, resulting in better operational guidance and metrics for success.

One area criticized in the sunset review was the lack of financial audits and oversight of the 27 matching grants issued by the commission from 2013 to 2019. The grants totaled $241,172, including three that combined awarded $13,493 to the Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio. Larger grant allocations have gone to museums in Houston, Dallas and El Paso.

In addition to no financial audits, the grant program lacked performance criteria and review, the sunset review found.

Reports on the review and public input are posted on the Sunset Commission website, sunset.texas.gov.

Nehemia Nammie Ichilov, who has guided the Holocaust museum in San Antonio through the pandemic, said the review process has been done a little bit backwards.

The Holocaust commission has had less than two years to comply with a 2019 state law that provided more direction than the commission had when it was created a decade earlier. Texas was among the first states to recognize the need for Holocaust education, he said.

Texas has gone one step further and said this is something that we want to make sure has a central focus, Ichilov said.

For Remembrance Week, which coincides with the anniversary of the liberation of prisoners at Auschwitz on Jan. 27, 1945, the museum has posted a schedule of two live online webinars daily on its website, hmmsa.org, providing stories of Holocaust survivors, often told through surviving family members.

Museum staff used a grant from the Holocaust commission to develop live and prerecorded presentations for the special week.

The San Antonio Public Library has been working with the museum on commemoration activities, including online exhibits, take-and-make kits available at all library locations and a self-directed Holocaust Remembrance Walk at Semmes Branch Library, 15060 Judson Road. For more information, go to the librarys website at http://www.mysapl.org.

The commissions website, thgc.texas.gov, offers educational materials on the Holocaust and overviews of other past or ongoing genocide events in Cambodia, Darfur, Bosnia, Rwanda, Burundi and the Middle East. The commission does not provide a mandated curriculum, but has materials and guidance for individual school districts to observe the week of remembrance.

Because of the pandemic, San Antonios Holocaust museum has gone 100 percent online, providing virtual tours, Ichilov said. Although many images from the Holocaust are too graphic for kindergarten or elementary-age students, the museum fulfills a state directive to provide early education by focusing on values.

We want to teach everybody who comes to the museum how to be an upstander. To use Elie Wiesels quote, The opposite of love is not hate, its indifference, Ichilov said, referring to the late philosopher and Holocaust survivor. We want to be able to teach the children that indifference is not an acceptable behavior. That when you see something wrong, you become an upstander.

The education initiative establishes a foundation for students, as they grow, to understand the Holocaust, the systematic genocide by Nazi forces of Germany of about 11 million people, including two-thirds of the Jews in Europe, along with political dissidents, homosexuals, the disabled and others.

Without that foundation of empathy and understanding, its easy for students to discount the atrocities as something that wasnt as terrible as what they saw firsthand a denial of truth that U.S. Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, supreme Allied commander, warned about, Ichilov said.

Its not that they dont want to believe that 6 million Jews, including one and a half million children, perished in the Holocaust. They simply dont have a frame of reference or a foundation to believe that happened, he said.

On ExpressNews.com: Holocaust exhibits in San Antonio have resistance theme

With the U.S. experiencing interesting times a global pandemic, self-isolation and civil and political unrest the missions of the museum and the Holocaust commission are all the more critical, Ichilov said.

For those who are either Holocaust deniers, or who are simply not interested in addressing the topic because they dont want to have to struggle with their own reality of what that would mean to how they define the world, its important that we continue to tell the story and keep the memory of those who perished alive, he said.

Ichilov, who became director of the museum in March, believes that people want to do the right thing but that there are times when some need to struggle with their own voices and their own conscience.

We need to make sure that we put as many opportunities for them to struggle with that in front of them, so that they can come to their own conclusions, he said. Because when we try to convince people of what they should or should not believe, it doesnt accomplish sustainable change.

shuddleston@express-news.net

Go here to read the rest:

Holocaust commission gets new life; atrocities to be recalled this week in Texas, San Antonio - San Antonio Express-News

CNN partners with the UN, UNESCO and the IHRA for Holocaust Commemoration Day – CNN Press Room

Posted By on January 26, 2021

January 25th, 2021

Atlanta, January 25th 2021. CNN is partnering with the UN, UNESCO and the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance for this years Holocaust Commemoration Day, on Wednesday January 27th.

The network has produced two key elements of the UNs official commemoration, which will be broadcast online by the UN, UNESCO and the IHRA on the day itself. Key speakers at the ceremony include the United Nations Secretary-General, Antnio Guterres; UNESCO Director-General, Audrey Azoulay; and Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel.

Clarissa Ward, CNN chief international correspondent, interviews author Dr Irene Butter, who survived internment at the notorious Bergen-Belsen camp during World War II. Dr Butter is also joined by her granddaughter for a conversation about finding hope and protecting democracy. Dr Butter has also written an Opinion Piece for CNN Digital, which will be published on the day.

CNN anchor Hala Gorani chairs a panel discussion on the issue of Holocaust denial and distortion. She is joined by journalist, author and Kindertransport refugee Hella Pick CBE; historian, journalist and Holocaust survivor, Marian Turski; historian and author, Professor Deborah Lipstadt; Dr Robert Williams, chair of the IHRA Committee on Antisemitism and Holocaust Denial; and author and international law expert, Professor Philippe Sands.

Germanys Foreign Minister, Heiko Maas, has also written an Opinion piece for CNN digital, to mark the Commemoration.

Holocaust Remembrance Day marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau by Soviet troops on 27 January 1945. In 2005, The United Nations General Assembly officially proclaimed the anniversary as the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust.

Ends

Photo: Suitcases stolen from people deported to Auschwitz(Credit: Pawe Sawicki, Auschwitz Memorial)

Go here to read the rest:

CNN partners with the UN, UNESCO and the IHRA for Holocaust Commemoration Day - CNN Press Room


Page 866«..1020..865866867868..880890..»

matomo tracker