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  • Resource enhanced

    New York Daily News, NY
    Aug 15 2004

    Resource enhanced

    $3M expansion for Holocaust center

    By DONALD BERTRAND
    DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER


    Eduardo Marti, president of Queensborough Community College, shows
    off model of new Holocaust Resource Center and Archives, currently
    housed in basement of library on Bayside campus.

    For 20 years, the Holocaust Resource Center and Archives has been
    housed in the basement of the library building at Queensborough
    Community College in Bayside.
    Now, thanks to a $3 million allocation in the state budget secured by
    Sen. Frank Padavan (R-Bellerose), the center will be able to almost
    double its size in a new location - and become a centerpiece of the
    campus.

    "What we are trying to do is take the Holocaust Resource Center from
    the basement of the library and put it at the forefront of our
    campus," said Queensborough President Eduardo Marti.

    "I am delighted that the state has approved the CUNY request to fund
    the relocation and expansion."

    The $3 million will be used to renovate a portion of the
    administration building that is now a mailroom and duplicating room,
    along with a loading dock.

    A glass-enclosed lobby will be built out from where the loading dock
    is now located.

    "It will be a very visible and striking facility," said the college's
    president.

    Marti, a Cuban who fled the island when he was 19, said he has had
    personal experience with the evils of prejudice.

    The new center, he declared, would be a "wonderful education vehicle
    to teach about what unbridled prejudice can result in."

    "I believe that by bringing the Holocaust Resource Center to a
    prominent location on campus, we will be able to utilize this
    facility as a vivid example and laboratory where we can teach about
    what can result when you have unbridled prejudice."

    Padavan said that "studying the Holocaust and other acts of genocide
    around the world throughout history is vital to understanding and
    preventing these types of brutalities in the future - and to stopping
    them in the present."

    The senator noted that the Holocaust Center works with schools
    throughout the state to develop curricula to study the Holocaust and
    other acts of genocide, such as the killings in Armenia, Cambodia and
    the Sudan. State education law requires curricula that include
    instruction and study of the Holocaust, Padavan said.

    Marti said, "We are extremely grateful to Sen. Padavan for his
    leadership in championing this important project through the
    legislature and to Assemblyman [Mark] Weprin (D-Bayside) and the
    entire Queens delegation for supporting this request."

    The borough president's office and Councilman David Weprin (D-Hollis)
    also have provided funding, Marti said.

    "For the 20 years of its existence, [the center] has been kept going
    through the good offices of Dr. [William] Shulman, who is a retired
    professor of our college, and a cadre of volunteers - most of them
    survivors of the Holocaust," said Marti.

    The hope now, he added, is to use the enhanced prominence of the
    center to be able to build an endowment so that the center can
    operate in perpetuity.

    "So that forever we will be able to serve the mission of educating
    not only our own students but also high school students and even
    elementary school students about the horrors of the Holocaust," Marti
    said.
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