Albuquerque Journal

Werner Gellert

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For my father, Werner Gellert, there was no more important mission in life than eradicatin­g hatred from the world, one person or classroom at a time. This desire to increase tolerance wherever he went stemmed from his experience­s during the Holocaust and as a refugee in Shanghai, China, as well as the pervasive bigotry that he experience­d once he came to America. Mr. Gellert passed away on November 9, 2019 at the age of 93. Mr. Gellert was born in Breslau, Germany on June 14, 1926. Following Kristallna­cht, otherwise known as the "Night of Broken Glass," a time when the Nazis went on a rampage against the German Jews, he and his adopted parents escaped Germany and became stateless refugees in Shanghai.

In 1943, the Japanese, who occupied Shanghai and were allied with the Germans, forcibly displaced 18,000 of the Shanghai Jews, including Mr. Gellert and his adoptive parents, to a ghetto in an area known as Hong Kew, or the "Restricted Zone". Although Hong Kew had better conditions than the Nazi concentrat­ion camps, it was still rife with disease and starvation. On one of his birthdays during his time in Hong Kew, all Mr. Gellert wanted was a loaf of bread and a jar of jam all to himself—a wish that was not fulfilled. Indeed, Mr. Gellert experience­d severe starvation while in the Hong Kew ghetto and survived such diseases as typhus, yellow fever, and serum hepatitis.

While living in the ghetto, Mr. Gellert had several confrontat­ions with the chief of police of the Restricted Zone, a man known only as "Mr. Ghoya," a pugnacious individual who was known for his instabilit­y and violent flights of temper. During one of these confrontat­ions, Ghoya hit Mr. Gellert in the eye, causing him to permanentl­y lose most of the sight in that eye.

After the war, Mr. Gellert remained in Shanghai, where he worked for the American Army as a typewriter repairman. When the army realized the extent of Mr. Gellert’s intelligen­ce and linguistic skills (he spoke seven languages, including the Shanghai dialect of Chinese), they recruited him into Army Intelligen­ce as a civilian consultant. While in post-war China, Mr. Gellert worked undercover as a member of the Army Graves Patrol, gathering intelligen­ce as he visited various areas in China, Tibet, and the Philippine­s. His time spent at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery made such an impression on him that he integrated many Buddhist beliefs into his Judaism.

Once the Chinese Cultural Revolution was in full swing, Mr. Gellert and his adoptive parents escaped Shanghai on the last boat out to the United States. They settled in Denver, where Mr. Gellert attended Denver University, where he met his future wife, Frances Silverman, on a blind date. They would go on to be married for 54 years. Mr. Gellert later attended Hebrew University in Los Angeles with the goal of becoming a Reform rabbi. He led the congregati­on of the Downey Temple for a year as a student rabbi. Although a serious illness related to the hepatitis he had contracted in China kept him from completing his rabbinical studies, he was considered an honorary rabbi and served in that capacity at the Jewish Home for the Aged in Reseda, CA and, later, at Temple Albert in Albuquerqu­e, NM.

Once he recovered from his illness, Mr. Gellert began to work for the savings and loan industry. He continued to work in that field until the mid-1980s.

Mr. Gellert and his wife retired to Albuquerqu­e, where he quickly became involved in the Jewish community. He and Frances first worked to create a new Holocaust Memorial in the Albuquerqu­e city center. To the chagrin of some in the Jewish community and to the joy of others, part of the memorial paid homage to groups that died in genocides other than the Holocaust.

Mr. Gellert believed that education is the best antidote to hate. With this in mind, he and Frances went on to found the Albuquerqu­e Holocaust and Intoleranc­e Museum and Study Center in 2001. Like the Albuquerqu­e Holocaust Memorial, the museum educates attendees not only about the Holocaust, but also other forms of physical and cultural genocide, such as the Armenian genocide and Indian boarding schools in America. For as long as he was physically able, which was well into his eighties, Mr. Gellert frequently spoke to school groups that attended the museum about his experience­s during the Holocaust and his time as a refugee in Shanghai. He discussed the destructiv­eness of hate and the importance of tolerance. He also traveled around New Mexico educating students about hate and tolerance. Mr. Gellert is survived by his daughter, Julie Gellert, and his grandson, Brandon Ligon, who both reside in Arizona. Services will be held Thursday, November 14, 2019, 9:00 a.m., at Congregati­on Albert, 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE. Interment will follow at Sunset Memorial Park, 924 Menaul Blvd. NE. Please visit our online guestbook for Mr. Gellert at www.FrenchFune­rals.com

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