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Students Remember the Horrors of Genocide with Yom Ha'Shoah Events

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  • Students Remember the Horrors of Genocide with Yom Ha'Shoah Events

    Students Remember the Horrors of Genocide with Yom Ha'Shoah Events

    Hillel.org, DC
    May 1 2006

    With drama, music and the sounds of thousands of names being read,
    Jewish students across the country led their campuses in remembering
    the Holocaust last week during Yom Ha'Shoah (Holocaust Memorial Day)
    and Holocaust Awareness Week activities. Hillel student leaders ensured
    that the lessons learned from the Holocaust and other genocides would
    not be forgotten as they planned meaningful programs that touched
    the entire community.

    University of Rhode Island Hillel paid tribute not only to the
    victims of the Holocaust, but also to those currently suffering in
    the Darfur region of Sudan with a "Field of Flags" on campus grounds.
    Students planted more than 2,000 multi-colored flags that represented
    both the 6 million who perished during the Holocaust and the 400,000
    victims of the Darfurian genocide. Although a memorial service provided
    a more intimate setting for reflection, URI Hillel Director Amy Olson
    said the field's central campus location gave thousands more students
    and faculty an easy way to experience the exhibit throughout the week.

    "It's hard to get people to come out for something because everyone
    is busy, they have a class or they have to study. This way, everybody
    walks through the campus and experiences it without making that extra
    effort to go to something," Olson told the Providence Journal.

    URI students weren't the only ones who called attention to the victims
    of other genocides during Yom Hashoah programs. University of Southern
    California Hillel partnered with the campus Jewish Law Students'
    Association and the Armenian Students' Association to sponsor a
    candlelight vigil in remembrance of the Holocaust and the 1.5 million
    Armenians who died during the 1915-1923 genocide in Turkey. At North
    Carolina State University, Hillel students organized a campus-wide
    information fair in which visitors could learn more about the Holocaust
    and the situations in Darfur, Kosovo and Bosnia, among others.

    "The reason we're doing this is because there are still a lot of
    problems with people hating each other and persecuting each other,"
    Ben Mazur, the NC State Hillel treasurer, told the Technician student
    newspaper. "Every time this happens, we try to learn a lesson from it
    and we try to educate people about it, but there are still problems
    like this going on today."

    The arts continued to play a vital role in conveying the memories of
    the lives lost in the Holocaust. University of Missouri, Columbia
    Hillel co-sponsored "Silenced Voices, a Concert of Remembrance,"
    which brought back to the life the music of many Jewish composers
    that was banned by the Nazi regime. Ithaca College Hillel brought
    author Ken Shuldman and filmmaker Rich Newberg to campus to discuss
    their works on chronicling the experiences of Holocaust survivors.
    And at California's Chapman University, the Hillel Foundation of Orange
    County and the Student Society of Entertainment Arts partnered to
    present the Jurek Becker play "Jakob the Liar." Senior Anna Scanlon,
    who adapted the play about misinformation in a German-occupied Jewish
    ghetto in 1944, said it has become an important educational tool for
    both the audience and the actors and crew.

    "The students involved have really learned a lot about the Holocaust
    as well as Judaism. They went to a special learners Shabbat since
    only two members of the cast are Jewish, and they really, really
    liked it. I think it's brought more humanity to the event, even more
    so than the audience, because they live and breathe these characters
    for several weeks and get to know their character like a good friend,
    so it makes the Holocaust much more real," Scanlon said.

    As in previous years, many Hillels also sponsored daylong or 24-hour
    vigils in which students took turns reading the names of Holocaust
    victims. Hillels at West Virginia University, the University of
    Virginia, Binghamton University, the University of Iowa, Arizona
    State University and Elon University were among those who organized
    readings. Holocaust remembrance activities were funded, in part,
    by the Darmstaedter Estate through the UJA-Federation of New York.


    http://www.hillel.org/Hillel/NewHille.nsf/ 0/5BE30648D7E87ED6852571610060AA5B?OpenDocument
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