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WVU honors Holocaust victims

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  • WVU honors Holocaust victims

    WVU honors Holocaust victims
    by Grant Smith, Staff

    The Dominion Post, Morgantown, W.Va.

    April 20, 2006 Thursday

    Apr. 20--WVU students and community members gathered at noon Wednesday
    to begin reading about 15,000 names of Holocaust victims.

    And they'll still be there at noon today.

    "I think the Holocaust is a life lesson for the education person,"
    said WVU President David C. Hardesty Jr., "that this could happen
    in a 'civilized' country. It could happen to so many with so little
    justification."

    Nazi Germany's Holocaust killed an estimated 12 million people,
    six million of them Jews.

    Hardesty helped begin the program, reading a poem by Pastor Martin
    Niemöller, and the poem "Unto Every Person There is a Name," by the
    Israeli poet Zelda. The name-reading event shares the same name as
    the latter poem.

    He then read the first few names of Holocaust victims. The first two
    victims were just children, aged 14 and 17.

    Hillel House, WVU's Jewish student organization, first held the event
    nine years ago, said member Heidi Solomon. About 30 volunteers signed
    up ahead of time, and she expected about 20 to 30 more to volunteer
    on the spot by the end of the event.

    Hillel House co-treasurer Lauren Bergstein said that reading the
    names is an effort to keep people from clumping the millions of
    victims into one group.

    "I think that one of the big things about this program is it's
    important to give everybody a name," said Bergstein, a sophomore
    occupational therapy student. "That kind of gives them more
    personality."

    Hardesty said the name-reading is a "poignant way" of remembering
    the Holocaust. "They were individuals with hopes and dreams," he said.

    Hardesty has been opening the program since it began at WVU, he said,
    and read books and histories in preparation. "I think I've become
    much better for participating in the ceremony," he said.

    He recalls an emotional moment from a previous year, at which six
    names of members from the same family were read. A father, mother
    and their four children were all killed on the same day, in the same
    camp. He said the ages of that family reminded him of his own.

    "I've kind of gotten better at managing that over the years," he
    said. The event is also an attempt to "make sure nothing like this
    ever happens again," Bergstein said.

    Solomon's mother, Jan Hausman, was scheduled to read names three
    times during the event.

    She teaches the Holocaust to eighth graders in Pennsylvania.

    She said one of Adolph Hitler's earlier speeches referred to the 1.5
    million Armenians' killed in Turkey in the early 20th century. He
    said since no one remembered the Armenians, they wouldn't remember
    the Jews killed by the Nazis in 20 years, either. "He was kind of
    laughing at the memory of the Armenians," Hausman said.

    She uses the Holocaust as a lesson decrying bullying.

    "If we allow that, what's next?" she said. "I show them what could
    possibly be next."

    --Boundary_(ID_XklzbDX1oTk5S582Cz10hw)--
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