Lethbridge Herald

Baptist pastor finds calling in post-Holocaust cemeteries

- Vanessa Gera and Dmitry Vlasov

Steven Reece pulls a shield over his face, takes a weed whacker in hand, and begins trimming tall grass in an overgrown, tick-infested Jewish cemetery in western Ukraine where tombstones lie toppled and broken.

For years now, Reece, an ordained Southern Baptist minister from Texas, has been cleaning Jewish cemeteries and erecting memorial plaques at mass grave sites in Poland, and recently Ukraine. The region, once Europe’s Jewish heartland, saw millions of Jews shot and gassed by Nazi German forces during the Second World War, sometimes with the help of local collaborat­ors.

The 63-year-old American says cleaning up old cemeteries is his way, as a Christian, of honouring Holocaust victims while supporting the surviving Jewish communitie­s here.

He also hopes his mission can help alleviate the bitterness and misunderst­anding that still festers sometimes between Christians and Jews. Reece explains that he is troubled by the failure of European Christians who mostly stood by passively as the Nazis marginaliz­ed, then persecuted and killed their Jewish neighbours.

“To me it means simply bringing together people who are separated by distance, by space, by conflict,” Reece said, taking a break during a recent clean-up operation in Rohatyn, Ukraine, which before the war was part of Poland.

“I saw the Jewish cemetery as a way to bring Jew and Christian together in a common place where they could work together with one another.”

Outside Ukraine, Reece and his team cleaned seven cemeteries in Poland this summer, including one in Oswiecim, the town where Nazi Germany ran the Auschwitz death camp.

Reece, who grew up in Texas and is now a resident of Peachtree Corners, Georgia, says he is driven by a desire for justice that has been with him since his boyhood in the American South, where the mistreatme­nt and segregatio­n of Black Americans was instituted in law.

“I was in the seventh grade when Martin Luther King was assassinat­ed. That made a tremendous impact upon me,” Reece said during an interview in Warsaw. “And when I encountere­d the issue of Jewish Polish history, due to what happened here, I saw that there is a great injustice.”

Part of his mission involves encouragin­g diaspora Jews to work with local volunteers in Polish towns to continue the cemetery maintenanc­e work. In 2010 he founded an Atlantabas­ed charity, The Matzevah Foundation, which takes its name from the Hebrew term for headstone. The foundation brings volunteers to Europe from the Brentwood Baptist Church in Tennessee and partners them with Jewish descendant­s to care for their ancestral cemeteries.

Since 2012, his organizati­on has carried out 28 projects in 14 different locations with the help of nearly 1,000 volunteers, including some 250 Americans, but also Israelis, local Poles and Ukrainians.

The recent work in Rohatyn was organized by Jewish Rohatyn Heritage, an organizati­on run by an American couple, Marla Raucher Osborn and Jay Osborn, who have been gathering Nazidamage­d headstones scattered in the town and bringing them to the cemetery in Ukraine.

Reece first came to the region in the late 1980s when he was on assignment in Poland as a photo reporter. After graduating seminary, he served for 12 years as a pastor in Warsaw and nearby Otwock, learning Polish and gaining a deeper understand­ing of what happened in Poland during the Second World War.

The country was invaded from the west by Adolf Hitler’s forces and from the east by Soviet forces. More than five million were dead by war’s end. Under the German occupation thousands of Christian Poles risked their lives to help Jews, but many did not act, and some joined the plunder and destructio­n.

Reece, no longer a minister, says he wants to help local Jewish authoritie­s struggling to maintain 1,400 cemeteries across Poland — a legacy of a country once home to the largest Jewish community in the world. That population has dwindled from 3.3 million on the eve of Germany’s invasion, to 20,000 today. Mass grave sites continue to be discovered, and the challenge is made more difficult as Poland’s economy grows and constructi­on booms across the country.

Reece said some in the Jewish community at first wrongly suspected he was seeking converts.

“I don’t deny who I am — I am a follower of Jesus — but that’s the not the point of what I do,” he said. “The point of what I do is to reconcile.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada