The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Holocaust survivor speaks at event in Atlanta

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

Marion Blumenthal Lazan was born in Bremen, Germany in 1934. Following Hitler’s rise to power, she and her family fled to the Netherland­s, hoping to escape to the United States.

But after the Nazi invasion of Holland, they were forced to live for the next six and half years in refugee, transit, and prison camps which included Westerbork transit camp in Holland and the notorious Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp in Germany.

Today, Marion Blumenthal Lazan, who lives in New York and is now 84, is a tireless Holocaust survivor speaker with a message about the importance of respect and tolerance. She believes in the power of positive thinking, creativity, and inner strength to overcome adversity. She will present the keynote address Sunday, Jan. 20 at an annual Holocaust Remembranc­e event in Atlanta called “Hope and Perseveran­ce.” The event is organized by Am Yisrael Chai, a local Holocaust awareness and education organizati­on. It is free and open to the public. (See box for more details).

Blumenthal Lazan and her family survived the camps, but her father, Walter Blumenthal, died from typhus shortly after liberation. About three years later, Marion, her brother Albert, and their mother, Ruth, obtained the necessary papers to board a ship and immigrate to the United States.

In a recent phone interview, she said her message is very simple “but so difficult to achieve.”

“Just to be kind and good and compassion­ate towards one another regardless of one’s religious beliefs, color of skin or national origin,” she said. “That is the basis for peace and had there been respect and tolerance 70 or 80 years ago, we would not be discussing this subject.”

She went on to say it’s important to look at the positive side

of life, to focus on the good and to try to discard negativity.

Blumenthal Lazan lived in various transit and concentrat­ion camps from the time she was 4 years old to just over 10 years of age. She credits her mother’s inner strength for helping keep hope alive. Blumenthal Lazan’s mother recently passed away. She was six weeks shy of 105 years of age.

Blumenthal Lazan memoir, “Four Perfect Pebbles,” vividly describes her struggles through the years of the Holocaust.

On Jan. 21, the day after the Holocaust remembranc­e event, Am Yisrael Chai is organizing a special planting of daffodils at Brook Run Park in Dunwoody (4770 N. Peachtree Rd) Dunwoody as part of the Daffodil Project. Am Yisrael Chai hopes to build a Holocaust memorial by planting 1.5 million daffodils around the globe in memory of the 1.5 million children who perished in the Holocaust. The Jan. 21 planting, from 9 a.m. until noon, is scheduled as an MLK Day of Service event which also includes planting trees, cleaning up the Dunwoody park, and making a donation of non-perishable food items to one of the donation bins on the day of the event at the pavilion at Brook Run Park. (You can sign up to volunteer by going to the Dunwoody Perimeter Chamber web site and clicking on calendar tab for Jan. 21).

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Marion Blumenthal Lazan is the keynote speaker at the upcoming annual Holocaust Remembranc­e event in Atlanta called “Hope and Perseveran­ce.”
CONTRIBUTE­D Marion Blumenthal Lazan is the keynote speaker at the upcoming annual Holocaust Remembranc­e event in Atlanta called “Hope and Perseveran­ce.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? In this 1942 photo, Marion Blumenthal Lazan is with her parents, Ruth and Walter Blumenthal, and her brother Albert.
CONTRIBUTE­D In this 1942 photo, Marion Blumenthal Lazan is with her parents, Ruth and Walter Blumenthal, and her brother Albert.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Marion Blumenthal Lazan at 7 years old. She lived in various transit and concentrat­ion camps from the time she was 4 years old to just over 10 years of age.
CONTRIBUTE­D Marion Blumenthal Lazan at 7 years old. She lived in various transit and concentrat­ion camps from the time she was 4 years old to just over 10 years of age.

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