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Rescuers A Model for a Caring Community _________________________________________________________________

Rescuers A Model for a Caring Community _________________________________________________________________. Birmingham Holocaust Education Committee November 2009. Dear Teacher: I am a survivor of a concentration camp. My eyes saw what no man should witness:

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Rescuers A Model for a Caring Community _________________________________________________________________

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  1. Rescuers A Model for a Caring Community _________________________________________________________________ Birmingham Holocaust Education Committee November 2009

  2. Dear Teacher: I am a survivor of a concentration camp. My eyes saw what no man should witness: Gas chambers built by learned engineers, Children poisoned by educated physicians, Infants killed by trained nurses, Women and babies shot and burned by high school and college graduates, So I am suspicious of education. My request is: Help your students become human. Your efforts must never produce learned monsters, skilled psychopaths, educated Eichmanns. Reading, writing, and arithmetic are important only if they serve to make our children more human. - Chaim Ginott, Teacher and Child

  3. 4 3 2 1 Universe of Obligation

  4. Bystanders (85%) Victims Rescuers (< 0.5%) Perpetrators (< 10%)

  5. Some killed, others helped the killers, or made believe they didn’t know. The vast majority were apathetic, unconcerned, indifferent. The victims died, not only because of the killers; They died because of the indifference of others. - Elie Wiesel, “The Courage to Care”

  6. Rescue Prior to the war, the people who became rescuers were not yet saints or even necessarily saintly, and the people who became killers were not yet villains or even necessarily villainous. - Perpetrators, Victims and Bystanders, Raul Hilberg • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  7. Rescuers • were from every country the Germans occupied • were of different ages • were from various social classes • were from all education levels • were from different economic spheres • were from various political beliefs • were from different religious backgrounds • were from diverse occupations

  8. Rescue Rescuers were ordinary people who performed extraordinary deeds. • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  9. MORAL LEADERSHIP The ability to influence others to accomplish a goal arising from a sense of right and wrong.

  10. Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz 1904-1973 Member German Legation in Copenhagen

  11. SELF-SACRIFICE Giving up personal wants and needs for the sake of others or for a cause.

  12. Irene Gut 1922-2003 Poland 1945 Reunion: Marian, Fanka, Henry, Alex, Pola, Irene, Moses Irene at the table with some of the women in hiding.

  13. COURAGE The state of mind that enables one to face danger, hardship or uncertainty with composure and resolve.

  14. Jan Piotrkow, Poland Deportations Piotrkow, Poland

  15. INTEGRITY Firm adherence to a moral code, especially in the face of adversity.

  16. Dr. Adelaide Hautval 1906-1988 France Tag with the inscription, “Friend of the Jews”. Dr. Hautval was forced to wear such a tag when she was deported to Auschwitz.

  17. COMPASSION A feeling of sympathy for the suffering of another and the desire to alleviate it.

  18. Elisabeth Abegg 1882-1974 Germany Berlin memorial plaque, Elisabeth Abegg, Tempelhofer Damm 56, Berlin-Tempelhof, Germany

  19. COOPERATION Working together toward a common goal or purpose.

  20. Irena Sendler 1910-2008 Warsaw, Poland

  21. SOCIAL RESPONSIBLITY A sense of obligation to ensure the welfare of others.

  22. Unknown Polish Christian Bialystok, Poland The Great Synagogue of Bialystok, built in 1908, was the largest wooden synagogue in Eastern Europe. On June 27, 1941 the Germans forced 500-700 Jews into the synagogue and burned it to the ground.

  23. INGENUITY Inventive skill or cleverness in confronting a challenge.

  24. Leopold Socha Lvov, Poland

  25. Rescue Rescuers, like perpetrators, were not born to a particular role or function. They became rescuers step by step. - Perpetrators, Victims and Bystanders, Raul Hilberg • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  26. Let us not forget there is always a second when the moral choice is made. Even in those times, when the terror was unprecedented. German soldiers everywhere, collaborators everywhere. Even then, there were people: men, women, rich and poor, who simply said “NO” – we won’t do it. - Elie Wiesel, “The Courage to Care”

  27. What Motivated Rescuers? • Some sympathized with the Jews. • Some were actually antisemitic, but could not sanction murder or genocide. • Some were bound to those they saved by ties of friendship and personal loyalty, while some went out of their way to help total strangers. • Some were motivated by their political beliefs or religious values. • Some felt ethically that life must be preserved in the face of death. • For some there was no choice, what they did was natural and instinctive. • Many rescuers felt they were simply acting out of elemental human decency. They later insisted that they were not heroes, that they never thought of themselves as doing anything special or extraordinary.

  28. One morning on my way to school, I passed by a small Jewish children’s home. The Germans were loading the children who ranged in age from babies to eight-year-olds. They were upset and crying. When they did not move fast enough, the Nazis picked them up by an arm, a leg, the hair, and threw them into the trucks. To watch grown men treat small children that way – I could not believe my eyes. Two women coming down the street tried to interfere physically. The Germans heaved them into the truck, too. I just sat there on my bicycle and that was the moment I decided that if there was anything I could do to thwart such atrocities, I would do it. • Marion van Binsbergen Pritchard • Describing her decision to join the rescue effort as a schoolgirl in the Netherlands.

  29. Rescue Courage is a whisper from above: when you listen with your heart, you will know what to do and how and when.” - Irene Gut Opdyke, rescuer • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  30. Methods of Rescue • Hiding a Jew in one’s house or on one’s property. • Supplying forged ID’s or ration cards. • Finding employment. • Smuggling people from one place to another. • Providing food or clothing.

  31. Rescue Each one of us is living proof that even in hell, even in the hell called the Holocaust, there was goodness, there was kindness, there was love & compassion. - Abraham Foxman, child survivor • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  32. Individuals Who Rescued Irena Sendler Miep Gies Oskar Schindler with some of those he rescued, 1946 Betsie, Corrie, Nollie and Willem Ten Boom American Friends Service Committee (Quakers) Andre Trocmé and his wife Magda

  33. Rescue It is a fantastic comment on the inhumanity of our times that for thousands and thousands of people a piece of paper with a stamp on it is the difference between life and death. - Dorothy Thompson, journalist • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  34. Diplomats Who Rescued Feng Shan Ho Aristides de Sousa Mendes Chiune Sugihara Hiram Bingham Raoul Wallenberg Jan Zwartendijk

  35. Rescue You read what was accomplished by a handful of men and women, and you try to imagine what could have been accomplished if more people had shown that they cared. - Elie Wiesel • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  36. Governments that Rescued Bulgaria Denmark Finland Hungary Italy Vatican United States Danish fishermen ferry Jews to safety in neutral Sweden during the German occupation of Denmark. 1943.

  37. Rescue Whosoever saves a single life, saves the entire universe. - The Talmud • Demographics of Rescuers • Traits of Rescuers • Motivation of Rescuers • Methods of Rescue • Individuals Who Rescued • Diplomats Who Rescued • Governments that Rescued • Righteous Among the Nations

  38. Righteous Among the Nations

  39. American Righteous Gentiles Varian Fry Marseilles, France, 1940-1941. Waitstill and Martha Sharp

  40. Avenue of the Righteous Yad Vashem I will give them in My house and in My walls, a monument and name better than sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall never be effaced. - Isaiah 56:5 Garden of the Righteous

  41. Remember that it is easy to save human lives. One did not need to be crazy to feel pity for an abandoned child. It was enough to open a door, to throw a piece of bread, a shirt, a coin; it was enough to feel compassion … In those times, one climbed to the summit of humanity by simply remaining human. - Elie Wiesel, 1984

  42. Teaching About Rescue

  43. When Do I Teach Rescue? • Place rescue within the larger narrative of the Holocaust. • Rescue can be taught in chronological context or as an addendum to the larger story of the Holocaust.

  44. Suggested Approaches • Comparing Acts of Rescue • Exploring Rescuers’ Motivations • Considering the Importance of Cooperation • Debating the Morality of Disobedience • Contrasting Rescuers from Different Backgrounds • Making Sense of Rescuers’ Flaws • Understanding Why the Rescuers’ Were So Few • Defining Our Own Obligations

  45. Comparing Acts of Rescue

  46. Exploring Rescuers’ Motivations “It was a matter of decency, we had no choice.” – Preben Munch Nielsen “I could not stay silent or idle … the silence was contrary to my sense of responsibility as a Member of Parliament and as a human being. [Such silence] would make me passively responsible for what could happen.” – Dimitar Peshev “Total overwhelming rage [at the loading of Jewish children onto a truck]. I don’t think I was ever as enraged as that in my life before.” – Marion Pritchard “When the Nazis decided to murder the Jewish people, I could not be indifferent. I had many close friends in the Jewish quarter [of Warsaw].” – Irena Sendler “I realized that there were only two ways: either totally unite with the Jews and together with them risk your life or forget them and thus contribute to their extermination.” – Oskar Schindler “Even if I am dismissed [from my post], I can only act as a Christian, as my conscience tells me.” –Aristides de Sousa Mendes “I may have disobeyed my government but if I didn’t I would be disobeying God.” – Chiune Sugihara “We do not know what a Jew is. We know only men.” – André Trocmé

  47. Considering the Importance of Cooperation Varian Fry Olga Kukovic Marion Pritchard Olga Rajsek Irena Sendler André Trocmé Raoul Wallenberg

  48. Debating the Morality of Disobedience Varian Fry Dimitar Peshev Jerzy Radwanek Aristides de Sousa Mendes Chiune Sugihara Eugenia Wasowska

  49. Contrasting Rescuers from Different Backgrounds Powerless: Jadviga Konochowicz Olga Kukovic Preben Munch Nielsen Jerzy Radwanek Hasmik & Tigran Tashtshiyan In a Position of Power: Dimitar Peshev (politician) Oskar Schindler (businessman) André Trocmé (clergyman) Raoul Wallenberg (diplomat)

  50. Making Sense of Rescuers’ Flaws • Varian Fry had difficulty keeping friends and often got into trouble at school; he was almost expelled from college • Dimitar Peshev supported Bulgaria’s anti-Jewish legislation and his country’s alliance with Germany. • Oskar Schindler was a weak student, was unfaithful to his wife, and drank too much.

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