Keep Our Stories Alive
Tonight I sat in a sanctuary and listened to a man tell the
crowd gathered there about how his entire family died. About how his hometown
died. About how his entire life changed during World War II.
I sat with some of my 7th grade students, who had
taken part in the ceremony that evening. It’s Yom Hashoah right now. From last
night’s sundown to tonight’s. A specific day that Jews take to memorialize and
remember the Holocaust and the effect it has had on our people’s past and our
people’s present.
I thought about being a sophomore in high school and hearing
Elie Wisel speak at St. John’s college in Annapolis. How he told us about his life
and the horror he had seen. He answered questions in a thick accent and I sat
in the back of a room with maybe a hundred people, unable to comprehend the
things that he had been forced to face.
Me, in the Auschwitz death camp, when I was 16 years old |
I thought about the woman I met in Poland, who spoke with my
high school group about her time in Berkanu. We were 16 and away from home and
on a trip where we spent an entire week learning about the Holocaust. Reading ‘Night’
on the bus rides and moving between ghettos and shuls and museums and cemeteries.
Crying a lot and holding hands, and feeling chills from the cold and from the
sheer weight of what we were learning.
My generation is going to be the last generation to know survivors.
To hear harrowing stories from the people who lived them. It’s our honor, and
our duty to keep those stories alive.
My seventh grade students sat more quietly then I have ever
seen them. They listened. They took everything in. At the beginning of our
ceremony, spread around the room and holding yahrtzeit candles, they had read
the names of children who had died in camps. The names were in Polish and
German and Hungarian and French. They were young—two or twelve or seven or ten—and
as my students read the names in a silent room full of people, I know that they
understood the burden of our people’s history just a little bit more than they
had before.
The Jewish people have a unique story. It’s full of tragedy
and horror and but also survival. Of life, in the face death. Of remembrance. Of
history. Of carrying on when no one really thought we could.
It’s our burden and our privilege to tell our stories. To
make sure they live on. Just like our people always have.