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'Freshman Seminar' Uses The Holocaust To Teach Life Lessons

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  • 'Freshman Seminar' Uses The Holocaust To Teach Life Lessons

    'FRESHMAN SEMINAR' USES THE HOLOCAUST TO TEACH LIFE LESSONS
    By Melody Hanatani

    Santa Monica Daily Press
    http://www.smdp.com/article/articles/4649/1/ Samohi-exhibit-talks-about-choices/Page1.html/prin t/4649
    Jan 29 2008
    CA

    The choices made today can shape tomorrow.

    It's a lesson that students in a freshman seminar at Santa Monica
    High School have learned over the past four months and one that will
    be relayed to the public tonight through an exhibit that features a
    series of poems, essays and art work that ties in the Holocaust with
    the power of choice.

    Titled "Saving Memories: History as a Witness to the Future," the
    exhibit showcases the work of more than 100 freshmen that spent
    several months studying a survivor from the 1939 Club, one of the
    largest organizations of Holocaust survivors that is based in Los
    Angeles. Each student in the mandatory freshman seminar was charged
    with the task of examining a survivor's testimony and transcribing
    the power of that experience into the form of a written or art piece.

    Part of the assignment included connecting the survivor's experience
    to themselves, said Tisha Reichle, who teaches one of the sections.

    "The class is about choices and the factors that influence the
    choices we make, " the Samohi teacher said on Monday. "It looks at
    what influences the choices we make and looks at how we can make
    a more positive contribution to our community, whether it's our
    geographical neighborhood, school community, racial community or
    religious community."

    The seminar is sponsored in conjunction with Facing History and
    Ourselves, an international organization that aims to educate students
    about issues of racism and prejudice in society. The non-profit
    organization provides the framework and resources for the freshman
    seminar, a program they run in various high schools and grade levels
    across the country.

    The exhibit, which is an aspect of the year-long course, is part of the
    Ninth Annual Holocaust Art and Writing Contest, which is sponsored by
    Chapman University. The students responsible for the top three pieces,
    which will be announced at the high school tonight, will be sent to
    Chapman University next week where they will compete with hundreds
    of students from Southern California. The student that earns the top
    prize will win $500.

    "The students were asked to reflect on the memories that spoke to
    them and what the importance is of having memories," said Mary Hendra,
    the program associate with Facing History and Ourselves.

    The exhibit tomorrow night will feature Alfred Benjamin, a Santa
    Monica resident and Holocaust survivor.

    Benjamin, who has lived in Santa Monica for 36 years, was born
    in Hamburg, Germany in 1936 and was the only member of his family
    to survive the Holocaust. The career photographer and artist has
    traveled the country on speaking engagements, teaching the history
    of the Holocaust through his own personal experience.

    "I want to give (my memories) to the next generation so that the
    memory will be kept alive," Benjamin said on Monday.

    Facing History and Ourselves' involvement with Samohi's freshman
    seminar began about three years ago to provide a place where students
    could explore the issue of identity, said Hendra, who taught the
    course in 2005.

    Aside from the Holocaust, the students have studied other genocides
    that have taken place throughout history, including the Armenian and
    Rwandan genocides.

    "We look at the Holocaust and the (factors) that influence the
    choices people make - the choice to be a bystander and do nothing,
    to be upstanders and to rescue people," Reichle said. "To in some
    way do something or to be a witness."

    The exhibit and reception will be held at the Mortensen Library on
    the Santa Monica High School Campus, 601 Pico Blvd., from 5:30 p.m. to
    7:30 p.m.
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