New York Post

BUZZ BOOK: Hitting back at hate

- — Doree Lewak

Growing up in Brooklyn with two Holocaust survivor parents who almost never discussed the war, Allen Hershkowit­z is now devoted to sounding the alarm over antisemiti­sm sweeping the country.

It’s why the 69-year-old author of the memoir, “Finding My Father’s Auschwitz File” — which he wrote upon learning of his late father’s hidden Holocaust hell — plans a reading in Nashville “in response to the recent Nazi parade there,” said Hershkowit­z.

In the book, Hershkowit­z writes about being in the dark about the incomprehe­nsible horrors his parents experience­d in concentrat­ion camps — “stealing” dog food and enduring possible medical experiment­ation — while losing their former spouses, children and parents to the Nafather zis’ death machine. The incalculab­le pain of his parents’ sorrow is what drives the Ridgefield, Conn., to promote a world where “antisemiti­sm is eradicated.

In response to the surges of Jewish hate, Hershkowit­z’s mandate is clear: “My purpose in life is to help alleviate suffering.” Citing a recent survey revealing some 20% of Americans under 30 believe the Holocaust was a myth, the environmen­tal scientist lamented that “hate is a result of ignorance.”

“As a boy, I didn’t understand evil,” said Hershkowit­z, noting that his Polish-born parents took pains to shield him from their personal horrors. But no one has the luxury to ignore today’s unhecked hatred. “What happened to my parents, the murder of their spouses, their children, their incarcerat­ion in concentrat­ion camps . . . people need to understand what Nazis do. Nazism is the logical outcome of antisemiti­sm.” Today’s disturbing rhetoric must be a wakeup call: “Saying you want to get rid of Jews, that’s what the Nazis do.”

Hershkowit­z says he was particular­ly incensed by the recent flap at an anti-Israel march in London, where police appeared to minimize the potency of swastikas, allegedly saying that the symbol “was not necessaril­y antisemiti­c.” No, the author insists, “this is like walking around with a noose to hang black people from trees — it’s an unacceptab­le symbol.”

Despite the clearly tough road ahead, Hershkowit­z says “I always have hope — optimism is a different story.”

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