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Polk Students Join Holocaust Butterfly Project

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  • Polk Students Join Holocaust Butterfly Project

    POLK STUDENTS JOIN HOLOCAUST BUTTERFLY PROJECT
    By Sarah Stegall

    The Ledger
    http://www.theledger.com/article/20090412/NEWS/90 4125021/1338/NEWS08?Title=Students-Join-Butterfly- Project-For-Holocaust
    April 13 2009

    Decades since Jews who survived the Holocaust were finally released,
    students at All Saints' Academy say that forgetting those who perished
    or suffered is never an option.

    To keep the memory alive this, 46 sixth-graders in Shelia Reynolds'
    English classes are participating in the Holocaust Museum Houston's
    "Butterfly Project."

    To remember the children who were lost in the Holocaust, the museum
    is collecting 1.5 million handmade butterflies based on a line from
    Pavel Friedmann's Poem, "The Butterfly," to be displayed in 2012.

    "I didn't realize how much they went through and how painful it was,"
    said Aislinn Tirney, 11, of Lakeland. "It makes you realize that they
    went through all this because of their faith. It's very sad."

    After reading Jerry Spinelli's book about children of the Holocaust,
    "Milkweed," Reynolds had each of her students research the life of a
    child who died and decorate the butterflies to reflect the lives of
    those children.

    The project "made us understand the Holocaust better than any history
    book," said 11-year-old Matthew Murphy, of Winter Haven, who suggested
    reading "Milkweed" to Reynolds as part of the project.

    Reynolds, who found the Butterfly Project on the Internet, said it's so
    important for her students and others to understand what the Holocaust
    was about.

    After seeing Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor who won the Nobel Peace
    Prize winner, and author of the memoir, "Night," Reynolds was changed.

    "He says that hate is not the opposite of love, but ignorance
    is. That's what we have to overcome," she said.

    Reynolds uses the Holocaust to talk about other situations such as
    the Armenian Genocide in the early 20th century and the current war
    in Darfur.

    "We need to educate as many people as we can about the Holocaust,"
    said Evan Budd, 12, of Lakeland.

    He said it's hard to imagine all the terrible things done to the Jews.

    For his project, he researched a young Polish boy named Natan Abbe,
    who was 15 when Germany invaded.

    Evan wrote a poem in the shape of a butterfly about Natan.

    As tragic as it was, Evan said, he cannot believe that there are
    people who don't believe the Holocaust took place.

    "It was not a hoax," Evan said. "It was inhumane."

    Jagger Larson, of Lakeland, decided to make his project a little
    different.

    Instead of using one butterfly, Jagger cut out many small butterflies
    and attached them to a rectangular box.

    He then painted two hands on the box, brushing the butterflies away.

    "The butterflies symbolize the Jewish people who were trapped in the
    camps," said Jagger, 12.

    "The hands are shaking them off, setting them free," he said.

    On the back, Jagger wrote a letter to Ulrich Wolfgang Arnheim, the
    child he researched who was murdered along with his parents in the
    Auschwitz death camp.

    "Dear friend," Jagger said in his letter. "I know you are one of the
    victims of the Holocaust ... This is a testament that I will never
    forget you."

    Holocaust Remembrance Day is April 21.

    [ Sarah Stegall can be reached at [email protected] or
    863-802-7547.]
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