Tag: Holocaust

  • Poland’s Misunderstood Holocaust Law

    Poland’s Misunderstood Holocaust Law

    My government wants to ban accusations of Polish wartime complicity for the sake of honoring history.

    Mateusz Morawiecki

    Nazi'lerin toplama kampı, Auschwitz, Birkenau, Polonya
    A visitor is seen behind the lettering “Arbeit macht frei” (work makes you free) at the entrance of the memorial site of the former Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in Oswiecim, Poland, on January 25, 2015. Seventy years after it was liberated, 300 Auschwitz survivors — most now in their nineties — will on January 27, 2015 return to the former Nazi death camp, the site of the largest single number of murders committed during World War II. AFP PHOTO / JOEL SAGET (Photo credit should read JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images)

    World War II altered not only the fate of nations but also that of millions of families in Europe. From the viewpoint of Poland, it was the end of a multicultural, multiethnic world that had flourished for more than seven centuries. The borders of prewar Poland in the east included cities such as Nowogrodek, Rowne, and Stanislawow.

    Nowogrodek was the birthplace of Adam Mickiewicz, one of the greatest ever Polish poets, who was personally involved in the process of creating a Jewish legion as part of his efforts to fight for Polish independence in the 19th century. Rowne was the birthplace of the mother of Israeli author Amos Oz, whose novel A Tale of Love and Darkness inspired actress Natalie Portman to make a brilliant movie about Israel’s difficult beginnings seen through the lens of a family of Polish Jews. As for Stanislawow, it is a place close to my heart. My mother’s family comes from this city, which is now called Ivano-Frankivsk and lies within Ukrainian borders.

    continious foreignpolicy.com/2018/03/19/polands-misunderstood-holocaust-law

  • REMEMBER: NEED TO PROTECT THE HUMAN DIGNITY AND HUMAN RİGHTS OF ALL PEOPLE

    REMEMBER: NEED TO PROTECT THE HUMAN DIGNITY AND HUMAN RİGHTS OF ALL PEOPLE

    by Sevgin OKTAY, The Light Millennium
    NGO Representative to the United Nations Department of Public Information

    “The first Amendment of the United States constitution does not protect freedom of speech that promotes hatred and for that matter incitement to kill.  And yet, there are summer youth camps in this country where they incite young minds to harbor hatred and killing towards certain ethnic groups as can be found in some published books. The point was made that perhaps courts are not applying what the constitution provides.”

    It was a pleasure for me to attend, as a Light Millennium NGO Representative to the United Nations Department of Public Information on Thursday, 25 January 2018, a Briefing about learning from the past through Holocaust remembrance and embracing certain values to help prevent such acts of terror from recurring in the future with an exact title of “Holocaust Remembrance: Diversity and Lessons to be Learned for Human Understanding“.  The program was organized in collaboration with the United Nations Outreach Program which, by the way, I had come to know about when I had participated in the United Nations Institute & Research (UNITAR) “Workshop on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect” back in January of 2014 as Vice President of the Poughkeepsie chapter of the World Affairs Council of America.  I thought the Briefing was well prepared and the panelists conveyed their learned lessons by dissecting the complicated issues into a set of objectives which could be carried out effectively, namely:

    • Preserving Holocaust memory;
    • Combatting prejudices through educational missions; and
    • Helping to secure justice and fair treatment for all

    Ms. Hawa Diallo, made the Opening Remarks of the Briefing. Photos by: The Light Millennium

     

    HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE BRIEFING:

    The Briefing opened with Welcome remarks made by Hawa Diallo, NGO Relations & Advocacy Unit, followed by moderator Kimberly Mann, Chief, Education and Outreach Section.

    Hawa Diallo began her United Nations career in 1987 with the Department of Public Information in New York. From 1992 to 1994, she served in two United Nations Peacekeeping Operations in Cambodia and Somalia. Upon her return to New York, Ms. Diallo joined the Office of the Deputy Secretary-General until moving to the United Nations Human Settlements Program (UN Habitat) in Nairobi, as an Associate Human Settlements Officer and later worked as a Partners and Youth Officer until moving to the Agency’s New York Liaison Office in 2010. In 2013, Ms. Diallo was appointed Public Information Officer in the NGO Relations Section of the Department of Public Information.

    In her opening remarks, Ms. Hawa Diallo thanked, what she called “dynamic” NGO expert panelists, including:   Ms. Evelyn Sommer, Chair, World Jewish Congress, North America; Sarah Kaidanow; David Michaels, Director, UN and Intercommunal Affairs, B’nai B’rith International; Jason Sirois, National Director, No Place for Hate initiative, Anti-Defamation League for their participating at this Holocaust Remembrance event and sharing their work here. She went on to say that it is important that we learn from the atrocities and holocaust that were experienced during the second world War and share lessons learned so that they may never be repeated.  She encouraged using social media to spread the word.  In fact, the whole  Briefing may be watched on UN Web TV:

    Ms. Kimberly Mann took over to moderate the rest of the session. According to her bio, she is Chief of Education Outreach in the United Nations Department of Public Information, where she develops the strategy for and oversees the implementation of global education initiatives, including remembrance of the transatlantic slave trade, Holocaust education, Model UN and other youth projects. From 2005 to 2015, Ms. Mann served as the manager of the Holocaust education program and she continues to represent the United Nations at the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. Ms. Mann joined the Organization in 1993, where she has held several positions, including Chief of Special Projects, Manager of the Messengers of Peace Program and Desk Officer for the United Nations Information Centers in Africa. Prior to this she worked in public relations and advertising and as a teacher.

    Ms. Mann welcomed the panelists, the NGO representatives attending the Briefing as well as the visitors on the UN Web TV and she noted the other activities that were taking place at the United Nations that week, namely, Holocaust Remembrance and shared responsibility seminars.  In this connection, she mentioned the overall theme reflecting the universal dimension of the Holocaust and accordingly the more than 150 holocaust Outreach educational activities taking place in the month of January across 38 countries. She stressed the importance of teaching our children the importance of standing up to inequality, hate and injustice recognizing that racism and injustice are only learned and for all to embrace diversity and build a common humanity in the general sense while at the same time pointing to the fact that recently there has been a rise in persistent denial of the holocaust and the spread of hate sites on the internet moving from the margins to the center stage.  She also mentioned  Secretary General António Guterres’ messages outlining the two duties of all those concerned towards mitigating these tendencies, namely: a) remembering the lessons learned from systematic attempt to eliminate the Jewish people during the Holocaust, and b) be every watchful of the dark clouds on he horizon: anti-Semitism;  along the same lines, prepare to take action against the growing sect of Nazism.

    Ms. Kimberly Mann is then invited Ms. Sarah Kaidanow,  a granddaughter of two Holocaust survivors: Jerry and Ellen Kaidanow, to address the attendees.  Sarah Kaidanow is the NGO youth representative for the Holocaust and Human Rights Education Center (HHREC) of Westchester. According to her bio, as an actress and writer, Ms. Kaidanow is able to help share her family’s Holocaust stories through her work. Most recently, Ms. Kaidanow produced a short film, featuring her grandparents, for HHREC. She has been involved with them for the past year and is encouraged by their work to bring Holocaust education into schools and communities which might otherwise have little resources for teaching the lessons of the Holocaust.

    Ms. Kaidanow started with a video of her parents Jerry and Eilan Kaidanow talking about their experiences as Holocaust survivors.  Their message was that every one of the survivors should come forward and tell the Holocaust story “one way or another” because- in freely interpreting their words- “those who do not read history are doomed to repeat it” as an ancient philosopher said thousands of years ago.  Having said that, the survivor parents added that younger generation should carry their stories forward so that they be become witnesses to what happened and help preserve the stories forever from generation to generation. Ms. Kaidanow added that this then can be translated into Human Rights through the lens of Holocaust and applied to current events which in essence enables them to critically analyze the situation and actively pursue what can be done.  That is, to put into practice in the current circumstances what they learned from their history classes.  In other words, Ms. Kaidanow underlined as she put it, “learn from the past to protect the future.” She went on to state that workshops especially for the young are crucial in teaching how simple bullying may develop into genocidal acts if not checked.  Activism to prevent such acts are essential, she pointed out.  These approaches they teach at the Holocaust and Human Rights Education Center (HHREC) of Westchester, NY reaching almost 30,000 students by now, she added. She ended by shouting out to her grandparents and turning to the moderator and saying “So, thank you for helping me to carry on this obligation of this third-generation granddaughter to move forward with my survivor grandparents’ stories.” Moderator Ms. Mann commended her for her work and wished that more young people would follow in her foot-steps.

    Next speaker was Evelyn Sommer, the Chair of the World Jewish Congress North America.  In 1990, the American Section of the World Jewish Congress (WJC) elected Ms. Sommer as Chairman, a post she held until January 2007. During this period, she chaired the Plenary Assembly of the WJC in Jerusalem and represented the WJC at important international meetings such as the OSCE conferences on anti-Semitism in Berlin/Germany and Cordoba/Spain. Ms. Sommer is also the founding President of the Women’s International Zionist Organization (WIZO) USA and represented WIZO at the United Nations’ Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) and its Commissions on Human Rights and on the Status of Women.

    She started by telling the core mission of the World Jewish Congress since its inception in 1943, as being “to fight anti-Semitism, racism, racial intolerance and all kinds of hatred.”  She then talked about having created a #WeRemember site on the internet where people who believed in the core mission was asked to take their pictures and post them with a sign “#WeRemember.”  At the time when they created the site, they were shooting for 6 million people to post their pictures and to their astonishment there are now 250 million people carrying on with that core mission.  Ms. Somers concluded her comments by showing a video of several survivors with ages ranging from the 90’s to one of age 113, if I remember correctly.  That video was followed by another video which showed how an El Salvador diplomat Arturo Castellanos and a Hungarian businessman Gyorgy Mandel in Switzerland helped save 25,000 Jews from the hands of Hitler from 1938 to 1944.  That act reminded me of the Turkish Diplomats in France and Turkish Consul General on the island of Rhodes helped save close to 75,000 Jews from the death camps of Germany during WW II.

    Next speaker was David J. Michaels who is the Director of United Nations and Intercommunal Affairs at B’nai B’rith International, the world’s oldest Jewish humanitarian, advocacy and social action organization. Mr. Michaels has traveled extensively and met numerous senior government and faith leaders, among them Pope Francis, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. His work and perspectives have been featured widely in international media and he has received several awards for his professional accomplishments. Mr. Michaels trained at the Office of William Jefferson Clinton, the Foreign Ministry of Germany, the Embassy of Israel in Washington, the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, Ha’aretz, and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.

    Mr. Michaels, grandson of a Holocaust survivor, started by giving a short history of B’nai B’rith going back 175 years or so.  He said that B’nai B’rith had a role in the forming of the United Nations and has been very vigilant in taking concrete actions against all forms of racism.  He described B’nai B’rith’s work under three categories:

    Civil society and Humanitarianism & Building Bridges between Jewish and non-Jewish entities across the world;

    1. Preserving Holocaust memory; and
    2. Combatting prejudices through educational missions across the world and “Diverse Minds” program encouraging writing books about diversity and inclusion.

    Mr. Michaels mentioned work in countries as diverse as Bulgaria, Romania, Middle East and a communal project in Cuba with emphasis on Bridge building.  Then he concluded his remarks with a video showing some examples of books written under the auspices of “Diverse Minds.”

    Last speaker was Mr. Jason Sirois. He is the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) Director of No Place for Hate®, where he oversees the implementation of the initiative in ADL’s 27 regional offices. Currently more than 1,600 schools participate in the No Place for Hate program across the United States. His biography states that Mr. Sirois’ objective is to expand this number to five percent of schools in the country by 2022. The program aims to create positive, sustainable change in a school environment in which students take the lead in developing a culture where respect is the norm. Mr. Jason has been a motivational speaker and trainer focused on addressing issues of bias, harassment, discrimination, and bullying in schools, communities and the workplace. His work has directly impacted millions of students and educators.

    Mr. Sirois   was introduced by moderator Ms. Mann by noting his important work in the area of creating positive and sustainable change in schools where students take on leadership in developing a culture of respecting diversity.  Mr. Sirois started by mentioning the founding of the Anti-Defamation League back in 1913 “. . . to stop the defamation of the Jewish people and secure justice and fair treatment for all.”  He noted that back then, the ADL had the insight to fight anti-Semitism through fighting all forms of bias. To go into that in a bit more detail, he talked about, what he called, Pyramid of Hate.

    The pyramid consists of five layers or levels, the bottom level representing BIAS in all of its forms of stereotyping, ridicule, belittling jokes, bullying and so on, which when unchecked will result in the next level of ACTS OF PREJUDICE, then ACTS OF DISCRIMINATION, which evolves into ACTS OF BIAS-MOTIVATED VIOLENCE resulting in GENOCIDE.

    Mr. Sirois went on to say that, when he presents this model, he is often asked at what level should one intervene, and he answers at every level.  If any one layer or level is removed, the rest of the pyramid falls, especially the bottom two layers which represent education starting from kindergarten and upwards: in other words, to live by “Never Again.”  Then Mr. Sirois discussed how education works with emphasis on Holocaust Education and equipped with words of action through an Institute, like rather than talking about the horrors of Holocaust, talk about resistance.  The key is to empower students to take leadership roles to convey “No Place for Hate.”  Mr. Sirois pointed to  www.adl.org/edcucation-and-resources where more is taught along these lines.  In the final analysis, the whole education boils down to where we are today, and what we are headed for.

    Moderator Ms. Mann thanked all the panelists before opening the floor to questions.  First question she asked Ms. Kaidanow as to how to get young people more involved in the type of education that the speakers have been putting forth. She answered by saying that, she representing the youth, can unequivocally say that millennials are really engaged in many areas.  In trying to woo them to a particular area, they must be respected, and their interest captured through innovative presentations on the social media with well-designed subject matter embedded in music as mentioned before, even hip-hop if done cleverly and nice graphics to grab attention.  Then David Michaels suggested making the social media interesting giving the example of “Milch” and it’s “I can’t keep quiet” music which apparently went viral.   Then Ms. Sommers interjected that the digital media is a must for reaching the young people.  She also gave the example of calling young leaders the title of “Young diplomats” where youth are given recognition by bestowing them with important responsibilities.  Mr. Sirois added that the adult educators should be trained to treat the students not as leaders of “tomorrow” but leaders of “today.”

    Then  Queen Mother, Queen Mother Dr. Delois Blakely,  (NGO Rep., Founder-President of The Future Foundation) -presumably well-known in the halls of the United Nations, but at least not to me since I had not met her before other than saying hello to her on the way to the auditorium– asked of Sarah Kaidanow as a millennial as to how to bridge the gap between what her daughter asks her about the “Holocaust” and the “Hellocaust” she has experienced as a black woman, I assume.  Ms. Kaidanow answered by pointing to bringing to the attention of the youth the experiences of different groups, such as of the Holocaust survivors, and by implications I believe of the black people, through pod-cast, Facebook and other digital media.

    Next a lengthy question was related to the treatment of Jews at various countries around the world, including Eastern European and Baltic countries and specifically to Ukraine.  The moderator answered by noting that last year there was a program specifically directed to the educators of Ukraine teaching them about the Holocaust and how it should be taught to school children.

    Remaining five other questions touched upon how to confront Hate and Hatred, especially in explaining to the youth within the context they are being propagated.  The panelists answered by way of reiterating the various approaches they had talked offered in their talks before. For example, Mr. David J. Michaels referred to the work of the B’nai B’rith is doing in 50 countries around the world.  Mr. Sirois referred to his model of Hate in stressing the education of people through the lens of Holocaust.  One granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor asked how to preserve their stories.  The Ms. Kaidanow mentioned that there was such a thing as “Safe-keeping Stories.”

    Another questioner wondered about how to handle hate speech under the protection of freedom of speech.  Another question was about the plight of refugees and what to do about their condition vis-à-vis their not being wanted or even hated by certain countries, may they be Jews or not.  She was informed about a UN program called “Global Compact” by way of encouraging countries to protect refugees. Before the final question, an attendee asked how to go about teaching positivity as against hatred through the arts.

    The final question was directed as to how to fight hatred when there was so much of it on the internet.  In fact, posing that question myself, as a Light Millennium NGO representative, I pointed out that in actuality the first Amendment of the United States constitution does not protect freedom of speech that promotes hatred and for that matter incitement to kill.  And yet, there are summer youth camps in this country where they incite young minds to harbor hatred and killing towards certain ethnic groups as can be found in some published books. The point was made that perhaps courts are not applying what the constitution provides.  The panel tried to answer the question by saying that we should educate youth “critical thinking” so that they would be able to overcome such incitements, and that there was really not too much “bullying” out there to give up altogether the fight through education.

    The Briefing concluded with comments from the moderator thanking the panelists for their valuable presentations and also thanking everybody for joining the Briefing.

    * * *

    Background  Information:
    One of the main lessons to be learned from the Holocaust is the need to protect the human dignity and human rights of all people, wherever they may be, regardless of their faith, ethnicity, gender or political beliefs.  Acceptance of cultural diversity, open mindedness and education for tolerance are key elements in building a world in which we live peacefully side by side our fellow human beings. Learning from the past through Holocaust remembrance and embracing these values will help prevent such acts of terror from recurring in the future. Join us for a discussion with a group of NGO experts who are working to promote Holocaust education and diversity, including: Ms. Evelyn Sommer, Chair, World Jewish Congress, North America; Sarah Kaidanow; David Michaels, Director, UN and Intercommunal Affairs, B’nai B’rith International; Jason Sirois, National Director, No Place for Hate initiative, Anti-Defamation League.
    Source: United Nations Department of Public Information | @UNDPINGORelations @UNDPINGO

  • ATAA Remembers the Victims of the Holocaust

    ATAA Remembers the Victims of the Holocaust

    ATAAToday marks the seventh International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which was established by the United Nations General Assembly to annually honor the six million Jewish men, women and children that were murdered by the Nazis in the Holocaust. Jan. 27 holds historical significance because it was the day in 1945 when the Soviet Red Army liberated the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.

     On the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, we remember the victims of the Holocaust. On this day we remember the 1.3 million people of Jewish heritage as well as Poles, Roma and Sinti, Soviet prisoners, and people of diverse nationalities and lifestyles who were killed at Auschwitz-Birkenau.

     During the Holocaust, Turkish Diplomats in Europe saved an estimated 75,000 Jews from extermination. Turkey served as a bridge between Jews and the organizations that wanted to help Jews. About 100,000 Jews fled from Europe to Palestine via Turkey. Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Israel.

     ATAA commends Turkish state television channels, TRT and TRT-Int, for airing a nine-part documentary on the Holocaust. TRT broadcasts in Turkish, Azeri, Arabic, Kurdish and other languages, and reaches over 200 million viewers from France and Germany to Kyrgyzstan, from Eurasia and the Balkans to the Arabian Peninsula.
    Resources:

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  • AFP: Turkey to become first Muslim nation to show Holocaust film

    (AFP) – 9 hours ago

    Turkey's broadcast of the film is the culmination of work by a group which tries to improve Jewish-Muslim relations (AFP/File, Andrei Nacu)

    ANKARA — Turkish public television will show an epic French documentary about the Holocaust, the first broadcast of its kind by national media in a Muslim state, it was announced Wednesday.

    A spokesman for Turkish public television TRT said the 1985 film “Shoah” would be shown on one of the network’s 14 channels, but did not say when.

    The director of nine-hour-plus documentary, Claude Lanzmann, called the Turkish move historic.

    “We should acknowledge the courage and determination of the Turks,” said Lanzmann, who spent 11 years working on the documentary. “Turkey is a country people don’t know and understand very badly.”

    Turkey’s broadcast of the film is the culmination of work by the Aladdin Project, a Paris-based group which tries to improve Jewish-Muslim relations.

    The group said in a statement the film would be shown Thursday, the day before International Holocaust Remembrance Day, adding that it had never before been shown in its entirety in a Muslim country.

    Consisting largely of Holocaust-survivor interviews, the film examines the killing of European Jews in Nazi death camps during World War II.

    Its broadcast comes at a sensitive time in Turkey’s international relations.

    Ankara hopes to eventually join the European Union, but it is embroiled in a spat with Paris over the French senate’s approval of a law making it a crime to deny that the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman forces in World War II was genocide.

    Ankara’s relations with Israel were damaged in 2010 after Israeli commandoes stormed a Turkish aid ship bound for the Gaza Strip in an operation that led to the deaths of nine Turkish activists.

    via AFP: Turkey to become first Muslim nation to show Holocaust film.

  • Holocaust: A Huge Word Made Small

    Holocaust: A Huge Word Made Small

    Rabbi Hier’s Op/Ed in LA Times:

    The Holocaust was a horrific atrocity and watershed event in human history. The meaning of the word is being distorted and demeaned in political rhetoric and casual comparisons.

    Marvin Hier
    June 29, 2010

    Over the last few years, U.S. political discourse has been saturated with opponents accusing each other of Nazi-like policies or behavior.
    Most recently, it was California Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown who likened the attack ads of Meg Whitman, his Republican opponent in the race for governor, to the tactics employed by Nazi propaganda chief Josef Goebbels.

    Brown later called me to say he regretted citing Goebbels. But most of the comparisons are made without apology.

    Last week, Sarah Palin criticized President Obama’s handling of the BP crisis in a tweet to followers recommending they read an article by Thomas Sowell that compared Adolph Hitler’s use of a financial crisis to give himself dictatorial powers to Obama’s role in creating the BP escrow fund.

    A few months ago, speaking about the controversial Arizona immigration bill (a bill that the Wiesenthal Center criticized), Lillian Rodriguez Lopez of the Hispanic Federation reportedly compared the measure to tactics used by the Nazis in Germany.

    The Holocaust was a watershed event in the history of mankind, in which
    6 million Jews — one-third of the world’s Jewish population — were exterminated. But today the word is used in ways that cheapen it.

    Last fall, Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson of Florida spoke on the House floor about the need for universal healthcare, saying Americans die every year because they lack insurance. “I apologize to the dead and their families,” he said, “that we haven’t voted sooner to end this holocaust in America.”

    In 2007, former Arkansas governor and Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee used the word in speaking out against abortion. “For the last 35 years we have aborted more than 1 million people who would have otherwise been in our workforce,” he said, “had we not had the holocaust of liberalized abortions under a flawed Supreme Court ruling in 1973.”

    And syndicated columnist David Sirota recently applied the term to the BP gulf oil disaster, saying, “Every American who uses oil — which is to say, every American — is incriminated in this ecological holocaust.”

    The continued misuse and trivialization of the word prompted Elie Wiesel, Nobel laureate and chronicler of the Holocaust, to discontinue using it. “Whatever mishap occurs now, they call it ‘holocaust,’” Wiesel said. “I have seen it myself in television in the country in which I live. A commentator describing the defeat of a sports team, somewhere, called it a ‘holocaust.’”

    Wiesel is right. There are many injustices and manifestations of evil in our world, even in our own country, the greatest of democracies.
    Standing up to them is not only our right but our obligation. But that obligation does not include distorting and demeaning the word that has come to stand for the great evil that was the Holocaust.

    The Holocaust was a total eclipse of humanity. It was not about going to the back of the line or eating in a different part of the restaurant or being escorted to the border without recourse. The Holocaust had one
    purpose: the total annihilation and extinction of a race.

    The Holocaust was the story of ordinary Germans: students, doctors, men and women of culture, who were not demented, who listened to Bach and Beethoven, who loved their families, who were not diagnosed as psychopaths, but who, nonetheless for six years, rounded up men, women and children and escorted them to the gas chambers.

    As the commandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss, wrote in his confession before he was tried and executed in Poland: “Up to this point, it was not clear to me, nor to Eichmann, how the killing of the expected masses was to be done — perhaps by gas, but how and what kind of gas. I was always horrified of death by firing squads, especially when I thought of the large numbers of women and children who would have to be killed. Now I was at ease, we were all saved from these blood baths and the victims would be spared until the last moment…. I also watched how some women, who suspected or knew what was happening, even with the fear of death all over their faces, still managed enough strength to play with their children and talk to them lovingly. Once, a woman with four children, all holding each other by the hand to help the smallest ones, passed by me. She stepped very close to me and whispered, pointing to her four children, ‘How can you murder these beautiful, darling children? Don’t you have any heart?’”

    That was the Holocaust. It is not the BP oil disaster, it is not healthcare, it is not Arizona law, it is not the attack ads of Meg Whitman, it is not abortion, and it is not even horrific violations of civil rights.

    The enormity of the crimes of the Holocaust was such that if you were to try to call out 2,000 of the names every day of the 6 million who perished, it would take more than eight years to complete the task.
    That’s what a holocaust is.

    Rabbi Marvin Hier is the Founder and Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

  • How Turkey rescued Jews from the Holocaust

    How Turkey rescued Jews from the Holocaust

    Desperate Hours

    The documentary recounts the little known story of how Turkey rescued Jews from the Holocaust WWII.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hI2IbouBE-g

    DESPERATE HOURS tells the story of:

    – How Turkey recruited some of the intellectual elite being forced out of German life to revamp Turkish sciences, architecture, music, medicine, legal education, and art;

    – How Turkish diplomats in France and Rhodes, acting on their own without instructions from Ankara, rescued Jews of Turkish origin and even when their citizenship was in doubt;

    – How the Yishuv valiantly and daringly used Turkey as a base for illegal immigration to Palestine and the rescue of as many Jews as possible;

    – How Monsignor Roncalli (who later became Pope John XXIII), then the Apostolic Delegate in Istanbul, worked with delegates of the Yishuv to get information of the fate of Jews and to rescue the few who could be rescued; and

    – How the Brand Mission – the attempt in 1944 to trade one million Jews for 10,000 trucks, and evolved eventually collapsed.

    Due to its neutrality until near the end of World War II and its unique geographical proximity to both Europe and Palestine, Turkey would come to play an important role to Jews in danger.  Through government policy and the actions of individuals, Turkey would be crucial to the Jews in many ways.

    A Haven for a Discarded Elite

    In the years preceding the Holocaust, Germany began dismissing and ultimately persecuting and killing its Jewish professors, architects, musicians, scientists, and physicians. Under the leadership of Turkey’s president, Kemal Attaturk, Turkey actively recruited these men (and women) to serve as agents for modernizing the new Republic.  Three sons of the professors tell their stories of a life of tranquil and productive refuge as those they left behind fell victim to the Nazis.

    Neutrality but not Indifference

    In both occupied and Vichy France, Turkish officials vigorously defended the rights of its Jewish citizens abroad.  Diplomats followed up on individual cases of Turkish Jews being deported to transit camps, extended Turkish citizenship to many Jews who had lost it, and at times mounted daring and dangerous rescue missions on behalf of their beleaguered citizens. Vice Consul Necdet Kent who was assigned to Marseilles and Vice Consul Namik Yolga assigned to Paris, now men in their 80s and 90s, recount their stories, along with Turkish Jews they rescued. The story of the Turkish Consul in Rhodes Selahattin Ulkemen, the only Turk to be awarded the honor of Righteous Among the Nations by the State of Israel for his work is rescuing Jews of Turkish origin, is explored as well.

    Rescue Efforts

    As the closest neutral country to occupied Europe and a vital bridge between Europe and Palestine, Istanbul was the natural place for emissaries of the Jewish Agency to attempt rescue operations.  Teddy Kollek, who later achieved worldwide fame as the long-time mayor of Jerusalem, was one of the officials involved in these operations. DESPERATE HOURS tells the story of the attempts at rescue, those that succeeded and those that did not.

    Jews for Sale

    In Hungary during the last days of the war, Jews were being deported to death camps on a massive scale.  Amidst the deportations, Joel Brand, a Jewish emissary, was sent by Adolph Eichmann to Turkey to contact the Allies with a daring proposition – the exchange of Jews for money and supplies.  The strategic location of Turkey and its role as a bastion of all intelligence networks became vital in the intrigues behind Brand’s mission, a mission  that has remained controversial to this day.

    Monsignor Roncalli (Pope John XXIII) and the Jews of Hungary

    Monsignor Roncalli (who in 1958 became Pope John XXIII) was the Apostolic Delegate in Turkey. He pleaded with the Vatican to become actively engaged in saving Jews, he met with Jewish Agency Representatives in Istanbul to offer assistance and to obtain desperately needed information, and undertook rescue efforts himself by helping to provide Jews with documents to help them escape the Nazi web.  Throughout his long life, he never forgot his experiences in Turkey nor the importance of the Holocaust – memories that that would later shape his actions as Pope when he would lead a dramatic revolution in the relationship between the Church and the Jews.

    At a time when millions were murdered before the eyes of an indifferent world, there were some men, and at times, some governments, who chose to act – not for praise, not for glory, but in the name of simple human decency.  And in doing so they dispel the myths that people were powerless to resist the Nazis.  DESPERATE HOURS tells the stories of those precious few who, in the face of utter darkness, never lost their sight.

    This is a unique chapter of the Holocaust that is little-known, and we think you will find it both engaging and informative.

    About the Producer & Director:

    Victoria BARRETT has been in the entertainment industry for the past 20 years as a producer, director, writer and actor. Her most recent production is Desperate Hours, a little known story of World War II – Turkey and the Holocaust. She is director, producer and co-executive producer. “Desperate Hours” was shot in Super 16mm in five countries: Israel, Turkey, Italy, Austria and the United States.

    Previously living in Turkey for several years, her experiences inspired her to produce, co-write and host the film The Forgotten Holy Land, the history of Christianity in Turkey. She was Executive producer, Producer, Co-writer and Host. This film was shot in Super 16mm in 15 locations through out Turkey in a challenging schedule of five weeks. Locales included remote areas in the east such as Mt. Ararat, the Aegean and Mediterranean coasts, Ephesus and Istanbul.

    As an actor, her films include starring roles in “Russian Roulette”, “Three Kinds of Heat”, ” America 2000 and Over the Brooklyn Bridge. She was a guest star on the hit television program Cheers.

    Ms. Barrett has written numerous travel and news articles that include a piece on Istanbul for the New York Times. She has also written various articles on Russia, beginning with her eyewitness account of the coup in 1991 in the then Soviet Union, and the many social and economic reforms that followed.

    Now living in Vienna, Austria, Ms. Barrett may be contacted at: [email protected]