To forget a Holocaust is to kill twice

| 18 Apr 2019 | 02:52

    Arthur Weisfeld, a Polish-American Holocaust survivor, sat down with students in Warwick Valley High School’s Leadership Academy class to tell his story of endurance and the loss his family members who did not survive Adolph Hitler’s persecution of the Jewish people.
    They gathered in the High School Media Center on April 2, joined by teacher Eugene Burns, school administrators and district officials.
    Dr. Leslie Green of the Jewish Federation and Family Services of Orange County, introduced Weisfeld and provided the historical context for the night his parents and younger sisters were carried away by Nazi forces, never to be seen again.
    Ages 12 and 14, Weisfeld and his older brother were trucked to the first of several concentration camps and eventually separated.
    Weisfeld would learn of his brother’s death when, sorting through the clothes of murdered prisoners, he came across his mother’s coat.
    She had given it to his brother before being taken away by the SS, the foremost agency of security, surveillance and terror within Germany and German-occupied Europe.
    Weisfeld offered detailed and dramatic accounts of life and death in the Nazi concentration camps and his experience through a “death march."
    He also recalled and the day General George S. Patton’s army liberated him and his fellow prisoners. It was the dream of that day that kept him fighting for his survival.
    “I just wanted to live long enough," he said, "to see the Germans lose the war,."
    Weisfeld would go on to cross the Atlantic and serve in the intelligence services of the United States Army.
    Weisfeld also paid tribute to the people who helped him and others survive and endure, including German fellow-prisoners who had refused to join Hitler’s army or adopt his ideology.
    Students were moved.
    “I thought the presentation was very interesting and gave a first-hand account to an event that I would have only ever read about,” said Owen Harrison, a junior.
    Following the presentation, students had the opportunity to ask questions of their visitor and celebrated him as a hero posing for selfies and group photos.
    “He gave insight into his amazing life which showed us the struggle and hardships he had to overcome to survive,” said junior Gabe Rodriguez, one of the students who insisted on a selfie with Mr. Weisfeld.
    “We discussed Mr. Weisfeld’s presentation in class the next day,” Mr. Burns said. “To students, Mr. Weisfeld’s story and his family’s represented a failure of leadership. They understand that true leaders seek to unite their fellow citizens, not exploit divisions and hatred. This absence of leadership and lack of empathy contributed to the horrors of the Holocaust.”
    This event was made possible by the Zacho Fund of the Jewish Federation and Family Services of Orange County.