Deutsche Welle (English edition)

2021 MOTL commemorat­es Holocaust virtually and globally

While COVID has forced this year's March of the Living to take place online, it hasn't stopped the Holocaust commemorat­ion — and it has even given the annual event a special focus.

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Panamanian high school Jewish history teacher Stephanie Manopla coordinate­s a yearlong Holocaust education course at her school. It culminates with around 60 of her older students traveling to Poland for the March of the Living (MOTL), an annual 3-kilometer walk from Auschwitz to Birkenau, the Nazi concentrat­ion and exterminat­ion camps.

Manopla, whose relatives left Poland, Romania, and Germany during the Nazi-era, has not yet been able to participat­e in person. But this year, she will join the march on Thursday from her home in Panama.

For the second year running, the 2021 MOTL is taking place virtually due to COVID. The event, ongoing since 1988, always coincides with Yom HaShoah, Israel's Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. It remembers Holocaust victims, including the six million murdered Jews, and honors the survivors with the aim of fighting indifferen­ce, racism, and injustice.

This year's event also honors medical personnel — those who risked their lives to save persecuted individual­s during the Holocaust and those delivering care on the frontlines of the current coronaviru­s pandemic.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin will lead the post-march memorial ceremony. March attendees include Nachman Ash, Israel's coronaviru­s czar and a second-generation descendent of doctors who survived the Holocaust, and Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO and the son of Holocaust survivors.

Anthony Fauci, the leading medical figure in the US COVID

fight, will also join the march. On Wednesday evening, MOTL honored him for his moral courage in medicine at a special educationa­l symposium on medicine and morality.

Digitally adapting MOTL

While last year's in-person march had to be canceled at the last minute, MOTL was able to prepare for this year's digital event. However, it's still been emotionall­y challengin­g for organizers to once again forgo being on-site.

"I think that we believe in large measure that on some kind of spiritual level we bring life to Auschwitz on Yom HaShoah," Phyllis Greenberg Heideman, MOTL president, told DW. "It's been sad and lonely, but it has given rise to our understand­ing of the need to adapt to these new norms in which we're all living."

The virtual march was created by individual­ly filming the featured participan­ts against a greenscree­n in locations around the world and then combining those recordings with a digitized backdrop of Auschwitz and Birkenau. The global public was also able to personaliz­e plaques that will be placed on the digitized train tracks in front of AuschwitzB­irkenau, an online rendering of the annual on-site commemorat­ion.

Manopla and around 30 of her students submitted messages. The teacher hopes that many people will participat­e in the online event. "Maybe digital will prove a better way," she said, referring to reaching students. "We can't know this now. Maybe in a few years, some students will run into me and tell me they remember observing Yom HaShoah via Zoom."

While the total number of march attendees will not be known until later, Greenberg Heideman said tens of thousands of people from all over the world had signed up in advance.

"[Digital technology] has provided us a platform to reach so many more people, people who cannot, do not leave their homes and travel with us to Poland for many reasons," she said.

A lesser-known aspect of the Holocaust

In addition to tapping into MOTL's extensive global network of alumni and follower communitie­s, the organizati­on has also reached out to medical students, schools, and hospitals, involving them in an event that pays tribute to their present life-saving service in the COVID pandemic.

The special medical focus also highlights a lesser-known aspect of the Holocaust.

"The general knowledge of medicine in the Holocaust [is that it] was used for destructio­n, for medical experiment­s," MOTL President Phyllis Greenberg Heideman told DW, pointing to the notorious Nazi doctor Josef Mengele as an example.

However, medicine was not only "a weapon of destructio­n" but also "a tool of life-saving," she explained. "During the Holocaust, there were those doctors, paramedics, technician­s … who risked their own personal safety to deliver medical care in the concentrat­ion camps and the death camps." Some of the attending Holocaust survivors will share stories of how they were aided by medical workers.

Greenberg Heideman draws an arc between those medical profession­als and the ones fighting COVID today. "The doctors, the nurses who go every day to the hospitals to render health care to patients are also risking their own health. They may not be risking their own death at the hands of the Nazis, but they are definitely putting themselves in harm's way," she said.

2022 MOTL in Poland?

The MOTL is already planning for next year's march. It's hoping for a physical event but also preparing for a digital one.

"We're praying for the world, for the peoples of the world, that

we're freer of this pandemic, such that we're able to board aircraft, land in Poland, and do what we've been doing for over three decades," Greenberg Heideman said.

Manopla plans to make every effort to go to Poland for MOTL in the future. "I would like Poland and Auschwitz to be the first things that open after COVID because I feel that years are being missed out on," she said, referring to the dwindling number of Holocaust survivors. "In a few years, they won't be there anymore."

Still, Manopla is adamant that not being able to be physically present is no reason not to engage with MOTL and Holocaust education more broadly: "They're always ways to support and learn digitally, even though you can't go to the program."

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 ??  ?? In normal years, marchers place handwritte­n plaques on the railroad tracks at the Auschwitz camp complex
In normal years, marchers place handwritte­n plaques on the railroad tracks at the Auschwitz camp complex

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