Sun.Star Cebu

Museum seeks funds to preserve war diaries

- / AP

A.C. Strip has long understood the significan­ce of the diary his older brother kept as they fled the Holocaust with their parents. He turned it into a self-published book that he gave to his brother as a 90th birthday gift.

But Strip never considered the diary to be an important historical document. The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum is making him rethink that.

Strip's brother's journal is one of more than 200 diaries written by Holocaust victims and survivors the museum hopes to digitize and make available to the public with the help of its first crowd-funding campaign.

The museum is seeking $250,000 for the project and will begin soliciting donations through Kickstarte­r on Monday, the birthday of the most famous Holocaust diarist, Anne Frank.

"I had forgotten some of these things in my own lifetime, all these stories about people like me and my family," Strip said. "The African-American museum is bringing these things to life that will not permit people to forget, and the Holocaust Museum, their job is not to permit people to forget."

Strip, a native of Antwerp, Belgium, was 5 and Joseph 17 when their family fled the Nazis. Then known as the Stripounsk­ys, they escaped across the border to France and spent a year holed up with a farming family in a small village before going to Spain, Portugal and, finally, the United States.

Joseph — who later became an engineer, settled in New Jersey and lived to 91 — chronicled the journey in meticulous detail, us- ing four notebooks. He accented his writing with sketches, maps and newspaper clippings. One sketch shows "Master Teddy Bear," a stuffed animal the family bought for young A.C.

Strip, 81, a lawyer who lives in Dublin, Ohio, broke down in tears several times while discussing his family's journey in a telephone interview. While his immediate family got across the Belgian border, two aunts and two uncles didn't make it. Their papers were Czech, not Belgian, and they were later killed by the Nazis. Two of Strip's orphaned cousins later joined his family in the U.S. and were raised by his parents. He considers them his brothers.

The diary project is important because Holocaust survivors are rapidly dying off, museum officials said. If the Kickstarte­r campaign succeeds, the money would mostly pay for the work needed to translate, catalog and digitize them. The museum has diaries written in 18 languages.

"We're living in scary times. Holocaust denial has been on the rise. Anti-Semitism and hatred is extremely worrisome. It's on the front of a lot of minds, certainly this institutio­n. These diaries, these first-person accounts, testimonie­s, this is the evidence," said Dana Weinstein, the museum's director of membership and new audience engagement.

Strip's brother was careful to write down everything. His maps were so accurate that, during a trip to France two years ago, Strip was able to use them to find the village and the farmhouse where his family hid.

The last name of the family they stayed with was Mech. Strip visited the mayor's office and asked if anyone with that name still lived in town.

"Five minutes later, a very nice gentleman, 62 years old, who wasn't born at the time I was there but who knew the whole story, came in, took one look at me and he started crying."

 ?? AP FOTO ?? DIARY. A page of Joseph Stripounsk­y's diary shows a pocket created on a page with extra pages inside, at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.
AP FOTO DIARY. A page of Joseph Stripounsk­y's diary shows a pocket created on a page with extra pages inside, at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

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