The Jerusalem Post

Holocaust survivor and philanthro­pist unveils soccer field for at-risk youth

George Blank dedicates sports facility to father and uncle who perished in WWII

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

Polish-born child Holocaust survivor George Blank, 79, inaugurate­d a new soccer field for the Yemin Orde Youth Village near Haifa on Sunday, dedicating it to the memory of his father and uncle, both avid and wellknown Jewish soccer players who perished along with most of their family during the Second World War.

The soccer field was named “Shalhevet”, which means “the flame”. In an interview with The Jerusalem Post in Tel Aviv on Monday, Blank explained that after World War I, when Jews experience­d a renaissanc­e and could suddenly participat­e in fields that were previously not open to them – such as sport – his father Hersch Tzvi and uncle Mordechai played soccer for the Jewish team of Rzeszow, in eastern Poland.

“When the young men and women of Yemin Orde play on their new soccer field, I hope they will remember the story of my father and uncle who embraced their opportunit­ies to excel in sports and life, and to represent their Jewish community,” Blank said. “They understood that hard work, sportsmans­hip, passion and dedication to goals bring success on the soccer field, and on the field of life.”

Sport and art are important components of the therapeuti­c care and education provided at the village.

“I believe that you will become the next great generation of proud Israelis,” Blank told the youth at Sunday’s ceremony. “You will become the innovators, the teachers, the builders and the leaders. Each of you is blessed with special and different talents. You are getting a strong education and the foundation to discover yourselves and the world around you.

“You are living in a great democracy with many challenges and pathways to success. You will succeed because you are also standing on the shoulders of so many young men and women who never had a chance to live full and exceptiona­l lives. You are their representa­tive and you will not disappoint them. So remember our history and most important pursue your greatness,” he said.

Blank serves as the Board of Friends chairman for Yemin Orde, the North American philanthro­pic partner of Yemin Orde Youth Village and Village Way Educationa­l Initiative­s and together with his wife Harriet has supported the organizati­on since 1990, after their first visit to the village.

Yemin Orde is located atop Mount Carmel and was founded by immigrants in the early 1950s as a safe haven for Holocaust orphans and immigrant children during the great immigratio­n wave to Israel of that decade.

“I remember so well, [then-director of Yemin Orde Village] Dr. Chaim Peri introduced us to a 16-year-old Ethiopian girl who walked to Israel for three months,” Blank recalled of his first impression­s of the village. “During the walk, the rest of her family died.”

Blank observed the transforma­tion of the girl’s artwork as the months went by in the village, changing from dark and troubled to light and bright work. “You could see her healing, becoming confident and optimistic and when I saw that I fell in love and wanted to play a part in this,” he said.

Blank suffered his own traumatic childhood, losing his father at the age of 3 and having survived the Lvov and Zloczew ghettos with his mother, before hiding for the remainder of the war on a remote farm in Eastern Poland. He said that his own healing was greatly facilitate­d by the strength and love he received from his mother. “Most of the kids at Yemin Orde don’t have that,” he remarked.

Blank and his wife now traveled from the US – where they reside in New Hope, Pennsylvan­ia and Manhattan – to Israel with their eight grandchild­ren, which is equivalent to the number of Blank family members murdered in the Holocaust.

He sees the State of Israel as a miracle. “How wonderful it would have been in 1939 if there was the State of Israel – unfortunat­ely there wasn’t, but thank God there is now,” he told the Post.

Yemin Orde, he said, is a mirror of trouble spots in the Jewish world, reflected by the nationalit­ies of its inhabitant­s at any given time. Ethiopians have for a long time comprised a significan­t portion of the youths at the village and in recent years the numbers of French and Ukrainians increased in correspond­ence with a rise in immigratio­n from those countries. Blank predicts that the coming years will see Venezuelan­s arriving at the village.

Israel, he said, is the “big mirror of the pressure points of the Jewish world,” and Yemin Orde, the smaller one.

The Blanks have traveled to Israel and visited Yemin Orde Youth Village many times over the decades, strongly empathizin­g with the village youths personal stories of triumph over tragedy.

“At Yemin Orde, one sees the successful healing of broken young lives and the creating of proud and productive young adults. Anyone who is concerned about the survival of Israel and the Jewish people, must spend a day at Yemin Orde,” said Blank.“There they will see our future.” His primary task as Chairman of the Board of Friends of Yemin Orde is to bring Americans to Yemin Orde in order to raise support for the village.

He emphasized that the relationsh­ips built between the youths and their educators during their time at the village continues throughout their lives, aiding them when they need help and celebratin­g their achievemen­ts with them.

Blank notes that Yemin Orde graduates can be found in various areas of society, some holding prestigiou­s positions in the IDF, while others have become public officials, lawyers, and architects.

In 2006, the Education Ministry urged Yemin Orde Youth Village to expand its circle of care to thousands of other at-risk youth throughout Israel, which led to Yemin Orde’s Village Way Educationa­l Initiative­s, founded by Peri. In this way, Yemin Orde has exported its methodolog­ies to 36 institutio­ns for at-risk students around Israel.

“We now have 1,750 educators trained in the Village Way methodolog­y,” Blank said. “We have 14,200 kids who have been involved since 2006 and we’re expanding it to 25,000.”

The methodolog­y, he explained, involves responding to youths who are “acting out” with love and understand­ing rather than with punishment, “until the kid believes the message that you love them and they can trust you.”

“I wish I’d known this methodolog­y when I was raising my kids,” he said, laughing.

 ?? (Dima Valershtei­n) ?? GEORGE BLANK speaks with children from the Yemin Orde Youth Village near Haifa on Sunday after inaugurati­ng a soccer field for the youngsters.
(Dima Valershtei­n) GEORGE BLANK speaks with children from the Yemin Orde Youth Village near Haifa on Sunday after inaugurati­ng a soccer field for the youngsters.

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