Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Wyman Conference In NYC Sees Lessons From 1939 "Voyage Of The Damned

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Wyman Conference In NYC Sees Lessons From 1939 "Voyage Of The Damned

    WYMAN CONFERENCE IN NYC SEES LESSONS FROM 1939 "VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED"

    The Jewish Voice
    June 18 2014

    Wednesday, 18 June 2014 18:09 By: Ariella Haviv

    Ten years from now, will anybody remember the ill-fated voyage of
    the St. Louis and its 937 Jewish passengers? Has the world learned
    any lessons from its abandonment of those Jewish refugees?

    These were among the questions discussed at the recent 11th national
    conference of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies,
    on the theme of "75 Years Since the 'Voyage of the Damned': Are We
    Doomed to Repeat It?" The event took place at the Fordham University
    School of Law, in Manhattan.

    The St. Louis sailed for Cuba in May 1939, as the passengers held
    Cuban landing certificates. But the Havana government decided at
    the last minute to refuse them admission, so the ship journeyed to
    the coast of Florida, where it waited for three days, hoping to be
    granted refuge. Coast Guard patrol boats shadowed the ship to make
    sure it did not try to land.

    Wyman Institute director Dr. Rafael Medoff, in his keynote address,
    said that a handful of historians have tried to defend President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt's image by claiming that the Coast Guard was
    not sent to follow the St. Louis. Dr. Medoff said it was important
    to expose these revisionist efforts and publicize the passengers'
    eyewitness testimony about the Coast Guard's action, "because the
    time will come, all too soon, when there are no more eyewitnesses
    here to share their recollections."

    Several of those passengers were on hand at the conference to share
    their recollections.

    Ronnie Breslow, of Philadelphia; Sonja Geismar of the Bronx, and
    Harry Fuld were children at the time of the voyage but have clear
    memories of that fateful trip. They were joined on the panel by
    Martin Goldsmith, a host for National Public Radio and Sirius Radio,
    whose new book, Alex's Wake, describes his efforts to determine the
    fate of his grandfather and uncle, who were on the St. Louis. Both
    men were murdered by the Nazis.

    The question of what lessons can be learned from the St. Louis tragedy
    was much-discussed throughout the day-long conference. Rwanda genocide
    survivor Jacqueline Murekatete said, "Clearly, the lessons of the St.

    Louis were not learned by the world, because the United States and the
    rest of the international community abandoned the victims in Rwanda
    in 1994 just as they abandoned the Jews fifty-five years earlier."

    Many in the audience were particularly moved by the remarks of attorney
    Stephen M. Flatow, whose daughter, Alisa, was killed in a Palestinian
    terrorist attack in 1995. He argued that since Palestinian violence
    against Israelis is aimed specifically at Jews and the Jewish state,
    it should be regarded as "attempted genocide."

    The Obama administration's policies concerning genocide came in for
    some tough questions. Columbia University visiting scholar Dr. Ahmed
    Adam, a survivor of Darfur, said that the administration has shown
    "no interest" in arresting Sudanese president Omar Bashir, the
    mastermind of the Darfur genocide, even though Bashir was indicted
    by the International Criminal Court.

    Dr. Hagop Deranian, the son of Armenian genocide survivors, spoke
    about his recent book, which focuses on a group of Armenian orphan
    girls who wove a huge rug and sent it to the White House in 1925
    in gratitude for U.S. relief efforts. The Obama administration has
    refused to allow the rug to be seen in public. Dr. Deranian said
    the administration's position is based on fear of offending Turkey,
    which carried out the genocide of the Armenians, but denies it.

    As part of the conference, the Wyman Institute unveiled two new
    initiatives designed to raise public awareness of the St. Louis. One
    is a 10-minute semi-animated film created in collaboration with
    Disney's educational division, called "Voyage of the Doomed." The
    film is intended to be used in high schools.

    The other is a traveling exhibit called "Envisioning the 'Voyage of
    the Damned': The Voyage of the St. Louis in Art, Film, and Theater."

    The Institute plans to bring the exhibit to synagogues and other
    venues around the country in the coming year.

    http://jewishvoiceny.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7679: wyman-conference-in-nyc-sees-lessons-from-1939-voyage-of-the-damned&catid=102:education&Itemid=285



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X