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Holocaust Museum Teaches Love, Not Hate

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  • Holocaust Museum Teaches Love, Not Hate

    HOLOCAUST MUSEUM TEACHES LOVE, NOT HATE
    MARCELLA S. KREITER

    United Press International
    April 17 2009

    SKOKIE, Ill., April 17 (UPI) -- To Warsaw Ghetto survivor Barbara
    Steiner, the newest U.S. Holocaust museum is more a museum of love
    than a chronicle of World War II inhumanity.

    "If we stop hating and start to love ... it doesn't make any difference
    what religion you are or what color you are," Steiner said Friday,
    two days in advance of the official opening of the Illinois Holocaust
    Museum & Education Center in Skokie, Ill.

    The museum, the last expected to be built with the help of Holocaust
    survivors, is an outgrowth of the 1977 Nazi march in Skokie, which
    galvanized the Chicago suburb's Jewish population, many of whom were
    Holocaust survivors, to put together a program to educate people
    about what happened. Some 12 million people died in Nazi death camps,
    half of them Jews.

    The $45 million facility boasts a 10,000-volume research library, links
    to the Shoah Project and access to tapes made by survivors living in
    the Midwest, and a replica of one of the cattle cars used to transport
    Jews to the Nazi gas chambers, as well as a mock deportation center
    and camp enclosure. For those too young to tour the main exhibit,
    there is an educational center on the lower level where children 8
    to 11 years of age can explore issues such as dealing with bullies.

    The purpose is to "teach people to love instead of hate," said Steiner,
    who helped blow up one of the first tanks to enter the Warsaw Ghetto
    as resistance mounted.

    "We fought longer than France, longer than Belgium, longer than
    Poland. We swore they would never take is alive."

    Steiner hid in a bunker she had dug herself and was only forced
    into the open after the Nazis burned the remaining structures in the
    ghetto. From there, she and fellow survivors were herded into cattle
    cars and taken to Mydanek in Lublin, Poland.

    Though the project was inspired by the Jewish community, the museum
    explores other examples of genocide, including Rwanda, Darfur
    and Armenia. In the artwork section on the top floor, there is a
    disturbing piece showing the backs of picture frames, representing the
    "disappeared" of South America.

    The industrial-looking, 65,000-square-foot building was designed by
    Stanley Tigerman.

    "It was done that way on purpose to convey the industrialization of
    mass murder," Executive Director Richard S. Hirschhaut said.

    Entering the main exhibit, visitors enter a darkened area representing
    what museum officials describe as a "descent into darkness." In the
    facility's Hall of Remembrance, the names of numerous Nazi victims
    are inscribed on a rounded ceiling.

    "I come in here and I see the name of my little sister, Sarah,"
    said Aaron Elster, who spent the war hiding in the attic of a Polish
    couple. "She was 6 years old.

    "My father told me to run when the Nazis came to round us up. I
    was 10. I lived in barns and fields and then went to this Polish
    couple. My parents knew them. For two years I did not go outside,
    or change clothes or take a bath."

    Elster's father and sister died in the Treblinka death camp.

    Sunday's scheduled opening coincides with the anniversary of the Warsaw
    Ghetto uprising. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton and Nobel laureate
    and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel are among those expected to attend.
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