Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Survivor Speakers Bureau was launched in Germany to promote education about the Holocaust.

Initiative launched to educate worldwide amid antisemiti­sm

- By Kirsten Grieshaber

BERLIN — More than 250 Holocaust survivors have joined an internatio­nal initiative to share their stories of loss and survival with students around the world during a time of rising antisemiti­sm following the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack on southern Israel that triggered the war in the Gaza Strip.

The Survivor Speakers Bureau was launched Thursday by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, also referred to as the Claims Conference.

“A Holocaust survivor speakers bureau of this scale and reach is unpreceden­ted,” said Gideon Taylor, the president of the Claims Conference. “At a moment of dramatical­ly rising antisemiti­sm, this program tells the history and educates for the future.”

Six million European Jews and people from other minorities were killed by the Nazis and their collaborat­ors during the Holocaust.

The speakers bureau connects Holocaust survivors with students both virtually and in person.

In the United States and Germany, educationa­l institutio­ns can invite survivors to personally speak in classrooms and university lecture halls. Educators in other countries can request video conference­s to ensure firsthand testimony is accessible.

The Claims Conference hopes to soon add more countries where young people can meet survivors in person.

“Holocaust education is crucial, especially given the current events happening around the world,” said Holocaust survivor Eva Szepesi, who lives in Germany.

“My goal in sharing my own story of survival is and has always been to show the human impact, not just of the Holocaust, but of all the racist and hateful actions being taken in the world,” the 91-year-old survivor of the Auschwitz death camp added.

“If hearing my testimony helps one person understand that they, too, have a role in the events happening in their community, and they can stand up for what is right, then I feel it is worth it for me to go remember and share those terrible stories.”

Antisemiti­sm in Germany, many other European countries, the United States and elsewhere has been described as reaching levels not seen in many decades. The Claims Conference hopes that first-person accounts of the cruelties endured during the Holocaust will help counter disinforma­tion, denial and prejudice.

“Firsthand accounts are essential to maintainin­g Holocaust memory and go much further to ensure people understand the impact of bigotry, antisemiti­sm and unchecked hatred,” said Greg Schneider, the vice president of the Claims Conference.

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