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  • Remembering Stephen Feinstein

    REMEMBERING STEPHEN FEINSTEIN

    MinnPost.com
    http://www.minnpost.com/st ories/2008/05/16/1868/remembering_stephen_feinstei n
    May 16 2008
    MN

    Stephen Feinstein, founder and director of the Center for Holocaust
    and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota, died suddenly at
    age 64 in March. On May 12, at an event at the Humphrey Institute,
    friends and colleagues remembered him as a scholar, an activist and
    a man who used humor as a "survival technique." Here is a video by
    David Feinberg, associate professor of art, that was shown at the
    event, and excerpts from three speeches.

    By Steve Hunegs, Executive Director Jewish Community Relations Council
    of Minnesota & the Dakotas

    This past Shabbat was the Minnesota fishing opener. I note it
    because it was a rare - if not unique - event for which Steve in his
    distinguished career of academics and activism did not:

    This next Shabbat, the Torah portion is Behar which discusses - among
    other topics - the Sabbath year of rest. This is completely inversely
    appropriate to Steve, since he was in perpetual motion and never,
    seemingly, at rest.

    * * * * *

    All of this energy and Steve's Russian and beaver skin hat were
    brought to bear on the Soviet Jewry movement of the Upper Midwest.

    Contextually, 50 years after "Red October," the Six Day War sparked a
    revolution of a sort among Soviet Jewry by rekindling their national,
    religious and cultural identities as Jews. In the years after 1967,
    huge numbers of Soviet Jews sought to escape intellectual and spiritual
    suffocation through aliyah or emigration to the West. This was a blow
    to the Soviet solar plexus and immigration was held hostage to the
    trajectory of American-Soviet relations.

    Into this moment stepped the American Jewish community, determined
    not to repeat its quiescence during the Holocaust. The Minnesota
    community, aligned with its tradition, organized activism in size
    disproportionate to its numbers.

    * * * * *

    At the center was Steve Feinstein...

    â~@¢ Lobbying for passage of the Jackson-Vanik Amendment tying
    trade with the USSR to immigration; â~@¢ Meeting with Refuseniks in
    the USSR when attending the Moscow Book Fair; â~@¢ Organizing the
    Minnesota delegation to the December 1987 March on Washington during
    a visit by Mikhail Gorbachov; â~@¢ Recording telephone messages,
    with a new action item each week; â~@¢ Demonstrating at hockey games
    or cultural events involving Russians - as Mort Ryweck pointed out,
    "no demonstration was too small for his participation"; â~@¢ Leading
    Freedom Seders with freedom hagadot; â~@¢ Leading the charge for the
    Vladamir Feltsman concert - a former refusenik pianist - which sold
    out Orchestra Hall in the late 1980's.

    As chair of the JCRC's Minnesota-Dakota Action Committee on Soviet
    Jews (1985 to 1992), Steve worked with a great cross-section of the
    community... . Poignantly, Steve was working -- always working. My
    last meeting with him, Susan Yana Glikin and Mark Glotter - not
    long before he died -- was planning a community 30th anniversary
    commemoration of the Soviet Jewry movement.

    As a friend, student and colleague of Prof. Feinstein, I can say
    his work was characterized by the fact that he was equally at home
    in the flat of a Leningrad refusenik, the galleries of the Louvre,
    the archives of Yad Vashem, among his vintage model trains, and in
    the classrooms and lecture halls from the University of Minnesota
    to Moscow. He was among the few who both wrote and shaped history --
    as only a person of his experience, interests and travels could. He
    was and will be remembered as the quintessential community person--who
    "respected" no boundaries of the University--and will inspire us for
    decades to come.

    By Taner Akcam Department of History and Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies University of Minnesota

    I am here to say publicly what Steve already knew - how thankful I
    was to him as a friend and colleague.

    In 2001 I was a visiting professor at the University of Michigan,
    Ann Arbor, looking for a position where I could stay in academia in
    the USA. Mutual friends put me in touch with him; his support for my
    invitation to teach here was crucial.

    Over the next six years, Steve proved to be more than a colleague:
    he was my "problem solver." Through every challenge, large or small,
    he was always there with a solution.

    My office in the Social Science Building was not a permanent
    space. "Why don't you come over to the Center," asked Stephen one
    day. "We'll give you a room; you will have fun here." He was right -
    to work beside him every day was a real pleasure.

    "You are the real Talat Pahsa," he would say, showing me the fez he
    had received from the Minnesota Armenian Community. "Now, we have to
    organize a ceremony to turn this over to you."

    Steve sought to incorporate not only the Armenian Genocide but
    also other 20th century genocides into the comparative scope of the
    Center. "The Holocaust can be adequately understood only in perspective
    with other Genocides," he used to say.

    Let others speak of Stephen Feinstein's philosophy of comparative
    genocide or his one-week summer seminar for teachers on Genocide and
    Human Rights. I would rather speak of the Steve who after teaching
    all day, went home and slept on the floor, too exhausted even to take
    off his shoes.

    Now, when it comes to solving practical issues, I am a person with
    two left feet - my only talent is reading books. But, when I came to
    the Center, I had no book shelves. PEHH - no problem! Steve knew what
    to do. "Are you going to build them?" I asked, astonished. There he
    was with the lumber, nails and tools.

    "Steve, this shared printer in my office is driving me crazy." No
    problem, there was Steve drilling a hole in the wall to reroute
    the cable connection out of my office. "How can you be so talented,
    Steve; we scholars are supposed to be clumsy." Well, "this is what
    we learned from the Nazis," he would say. "This is how you survive
    in a concentration camp."

    He walked in every morning with a joke, tossing a sheet of paper on my
    desk, or starting a new story, "have you heard the one about...." He
    would come to my office saying, "check your email, I just sent you
    something" or he would call me over to his office to watch a video
    clip or to read a joke. Steve was hilarious, laughing with full
    mouth.... "The jokes are my survival technique," he used to say. But
    they were a social pressure for [me]: Oh my god! What should I tell
    him today?

    He loved to see me in the office everyday from 8 to 5. "I am sorry,
    Steve, I had to take my daughter to the doctor." "Steve, I am leaving,
    Helin missed the bus, I had to pick her up." "You need a wife,"
    he would say. "Tell your Armenian friends they have to find you an
    Armenian wife. This cannot go on. You cannot work. They should know
    that they are hindering genocide research; this will be their way to
    contribute to it."

    He used to tell visitors, anyone who walked in the door, "I am looking
    for a Jewish wife for Taner. The Armenians cannot find one. So, even
    though having a Jewish wife and dealing with Armenian Genocide is very
    suspect, we don't have any other choice." That was embarrassing.....

    Steve saw life as a joke and lived it as a joke. His leaving us was
    also a joke but one of his worst ones. Steve...my dear friend...you are
    always with me, wherever I go. And I am hoping to see you there...to
    listen to one more joke from you.

    By Henry Oertelt Holocaust Survivor

    My association with Steve with goes back at least 25 years, when he
    invited me to speak at his class at [the University of Wisconsin],
    River Falls. I can say it was "love at first sight." I was taken in
    by his easy-going casualness and his wonderful sense of humor. It
    was there that I had my first experience with his quick humor.

    During my lecturing I had explained that, during my incarceration in
    the concentration camps, I was able to utilize my trained profession
    of designing and building fine furniture. I had explained that on two
    of those occasions I was transported to other camps, without being
    able to finish the projects I was working on. During the following
    question and answer session, one student wanted to know if I was still
    working in that profession. Before I was able to answer, Steve jumped
    in and quipped, "What do you think, with that kind of a work record?"

    For more information, go to the Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies website.

    --Boundary_(ID_9ZI9l6wAswww4aPl9l1BxA)--
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