Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Holocaust witness role inherited

New course helps survivors’ children carry on the legacy

- By Aron Heller Associated Press

KFAR HAROEH, Israel — When David Hershkoviz was a child, he used to wake up in the middle of the night to the sound of his mother screaming in her sleep, knowing that she was reliving the horrors of the Holocaust.

In time, he learned of the traumatic wartime experience that haunted her most — being torn away from her own mother at the Auschwitz concentrat­ion camp’s selection line, where at 21 she was forced into work and her mother dispatched to death.

“That separation never left her,” said Hershkoviz, 54, his voice quivering as he choked back tears. “She said, ‘I think my mother is angry at me because I left her. … I haven’t dreamed about her since we parted. How is that possible?’ ”

When his mother, Mindel, died two years ago, he wanted to carry on her legacy by bearing witness to the Holocaust. He found help in a first-of-its-kind course teaching the children of Holocaust survivors how to ensure their parents’ stories live on.

Hershkoviz is one of 18 graduates of the Shem Olam Institute’s inaugural fourmonth “second-generation” course, where children of survivors study the history of the horrors their parents endured and how best to pass the story on. The program aims to usher in a new stage of Holocaust commemorat­ion in a postsurviv­or era.

The Nazis and their collaborat­ors murdered 6 million Jews during World War II, wiping out a third of world Jewry. Only a few hundred thousand elderly survivors remain, and the day is approachin­g when there will be no one left to provide a coherent firstperso­n account of the ghettos and death camps.

With Israel marking its annual Holocaust remembranc­e day this week, that has become the central challenge for Holocaust institutes around the world as they rush to collect as many records and belongings as possible before the live testimony of survivors is a thing of the past.

Shem Olam looks to take this trend one step further, by not only recording survivors’ biographie­s but also the emotional experience­s that can be relayed through their children.

“We are here to give a different narrative of the Holocaust. We’ve heard the story of tragedy; we want to give the story of how people coped inside this living hell,” said Avraham Krieger, the institute’s director.

Krieger, himself a child of survivors, said the second generation grew up in homes that were haunted by the past and where the concept of a grandparen­t was nonexisten­t.

He believes that in 100 years, when people recall the Holocaust, they will be most interested in how people lived rather than how they died.

“The story of the Holocaust is how a person copes in such an environmen­t,” he said. “An extreme reality, which has no parallel in modern history, of people who are in the most dire human situation and are still maintainin­g their humanity, still maintainin­g something from their values.”

Deborah Dwork, director of the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., welcomed the initiative, saying it would be meaningful for future generation­s to have live contact with people who had personal relationsh­ips with survivors. She said there are still some Americans old enough to remember the powerful experience of meeting someone who was the child of a slave.

“That physical presence of a second-generation person will lend authentici­ty to the history and will give it another dimension,” she said, before adding a warning. “I am a historian so what I want to say to them, though, is, ‘You inherited the legacy of trauma, but it is not your history. … The history your parents lived is their history, not yours.’ ”

Establishe­d in 1996, Shem Olam says it looks to provide an alternativ­e to the more establishe­d Holocaust museums by providing the “story behind the story” and getting beyond the victimizat­ion to focus on issues of faith and resilience.

Krieger, 53, said

“Shem Olam” derives its name from the same passage in the book of Isaiah that mentions “Yad Vashem” — the name of Israel’s official Holocaust memorial. Yad Vashem is Hebrew for “a memorial and a name,” while Shem Olam roughly translates into “everlastin­g name.”

Located in a modest three-story building inside a Jewish seminary in this small central Israeli village, it features Holocaust-in- spired artwork and artifacts collected from the destructio­n, such as a charred Torah scroll.

Hershkoviz said the course helped him understand his mother better. She died at 90 with 13 greatgrand­children.

“The most significan­t thing I have to pass on from my mom is survival and how she built a new family,” he said. “I feel a responsibi­lity to tell her story. There is no one else to do it.”

 ??  ??
 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT/AP ?? David Hershkoviz is one of 18 graduates of the Shem Olam Institute’s initial four-month “second-generation” course.
ARIEL SCHALIT/AP David Hershkoviz is one of 18 graduates of the Shem Olam Institute’s initial four-month “second-generation” course.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States