Monday, May 8, 2017
Looking back on Poland
Sunday, May 7, 2017
Guilty Of Ignorance
As I am writing
this on May 1st, 2017, it has been seven weeks since our journey
from New York to Poland. Although I am finally settled back to life at Iona
College, overloaded with work as finals are quickly approaching and surrounded
by my friends in a residence hall that has become a place that I can call home,
I am still constantly reminded of my journey to Poland. I knew that going to
Poland would be a rare experience that I would treasure forever, but I did not
know how many things in the United States would remind me about what had
happened during these devastating times. For the past year, U.S. President
Donald Trump has been compared to Adolf Hitler, but I have never focused or
understood why people had this opinion. I thought it was nonsense and people
simply being upset because they did not like this political figure, but after
my journey to Poland, I understand peoples concern. Following my return from
Poland, I saw an article about the early warning signs of fascism so I clicked
it. The article was directed at Donald Trump, and his similarities towards
Adolf Hitler. Some of these warning signs included a distain for human rights,
rampant sexism, controlled mass media, obsession with national security, and
fraudulent elections. While Donald Trump and the RNC deny this, there have been
many allegations towards Donald Trump that go along with these warning signs. A
few weeks back, White House press secretary Sean Spicer while talking about the
danger of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad argued in a press conference that
Hitler had not used chemical weapons for World War II. These examples of Sean
Spicer and Donald Trump comparisons to Adolf Hitler make me realize that people
are ignorant and ill-informed when it comes to World War II and the Holocaust.
A Day in Krakow
“After the war, 4,282 Jews resurfaced in Krakow.
By early 1946, Polish Jews returning from the Soviet Union swelled the Jewish
population of the city to approximately 10,000. Pogroms in August 1945 and
throughout 1946 as well as number of murders of individual Jews led to the
emigration of many of the surviving Krakow Jews. By the early 1990s, only a few
hundred Jews remained in Krakow”.
Today, the city is
slowly growing and increasing their Jewish population. We visited the Jewish
Community Center in Krakow, where we were given the opportunity to meet and listen to a
lecture by the director of the Center, Jonathan Ornstein. The purpose of the
Center is to allow all Jews to become members of the center, allowing them to
get a chance to understand and expand their knowledge on their culture and
beliefs. Through our lecture he gave us an example of one individual experience from
a young girl that had recently visited the Center. He explained her great
grandmother was a Jew but during the Shoah she made it clear to her
daughter the young girls’ grandmother, to deny her Jewish beliefs forever. Now, her grandmother is elderly, and she confessed to her that they came from a Jewish background.
This was the opportunity for her to visit the Center and expand her knowledge
and start a new life as a Jew.
Soon
after we arrived in Krakow, we also visited a synagogue, and a cemetery in
Krakow. We came across a wall in the cemetery that was very special.
It had many different pieces of stones, from a cemetery during the World War II, where majority of the Jewish cemeteries where targeted and destroyed.
All of the stones on these particular wall where found individually, and they had no place to put it back since they wouldn’t be able to know where they
belonged.
We also, attended a
lecture in the University of Krakow, and listen to a lecture by Dr. Anna-Maria
Orla-Bukowska. During her lecture she showed many pictures that justified the
unity between many Jewish Students’ today with Atheist, and Christian students.
She describes Krakow as a town filled with unity, even after all the division
they faced during and after WWII.
(Cite
Source)
"Krakow (Cracow)." United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,
n.d. Web. 05 May 2017.
Saturday, May 6, 2017
Work Doesn't Set You Free
As I am writing this, it is still surreal to me that I am in Poland, let alone in Oswiecim, where Auschwitz 1 is located. We have all gotten used to our living arrangements and being in a foreign country, but some of us, like myself, are still not used to the time difference. Although my sleep schedule is a mess, it gives me time at night to reflect on the day, which helps me follow the reasons why I am here, to witness and to learn. Over the past few days, we have visited the concentration camps of Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz Birkenau. I went in with indescribably unknown expectations, and I was eager to embark on this experience of a lifetime. As we walked over from our home away from home to Auschwitz 1, we were full of energy, and didn’t fully understand how our day and lives were about to change as we walked under the unsettling but prominent sign at the entrance of Auschwitz that reads “Arbeit Macht Frei,” which means “work sets you free.”
As we were walking over, the first thing that we saw was an old, grey building that looks like it hasn’t been touched in dozens of years. This building was the building where all of the prisoners arrived to the camp from their train cars, and you could still see the ruins of the rusty railroad tracks that led through the town and up to the building. From the moment I saw this building and the rusty railroad tracks, this experience became real for me, and I finally felt like I was in the presence of where all of this had happened. As soon as we walked onto the grounds of Auschwitz 1, our tour had begun, and we had received some unsettling facts. I thought that I had known a lot about Auschwitz and the Holocaust as a whole, but some of the facts hit me hard. I was told that there were up to one thousand people in each building at one point, and if I were asked how many people I would say could fit in each building comfortably, I would have said fifty. I could not even imagine fitting over 200 people in that building, let alone five times that. As we passed by the crematorium, I felt my stomach turn for the first time. We were told that up to 1,500 bodies were cremated per day, and there were up to 2,000 dead bodies per pile. When I heard this, I realized that they were killing more than 1,500 Jews per day. Over 1,500 people lost their innocent life every day, and there was nothing they could do about it. Before the war, there was around a 3.3 million Jewish population in Poland, which was one the biggest Jewish communities. Today in Poland, that number is drastically reduced. When standing on the grounds of these concentration, I was trying to think of words to describe what I was looking at, and one word that kept reoccurring was ‘hell’. The Holocaust, Auschwitz, and every death camp was the real life hell, and I still have questions that may never have an answer to them.
Ignorance Isn't Bliss
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Auschwitz II - Birkenau |
A little over a month ago I returned from Poland with a new understanding of what happened during the Holocaust. I find Spicer’s comments so disturbing because they were made out of complete ignorance on the Holocaust and Hitler. Not only did Hitler use one kind of “chemical weapon” he used multiple, including carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and Zyklon B. I think the most troubling part of Spicer’s remarks isn’t even the comments themselves, it is that Spicer’s view, though very public, aren’t the only display of ignorance on the Holocaust today.
Since returning I have been asked many questions about my time in Poland, but most recently they have been about things people have heard on tv or read in the news. People generally are not knowingly being insensitive or cruel but they simply don't understand the historical significance of this tragic event. I have learned that you need to use this as an opportunity to educate people instead of getting frustrated.
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Walls in Auschwitz stained by Zyklon B |
If I was to have a conversation with Sean Spicer today I would probably start by showing him the photo album filled with my chilling pictures from Auschwitz I and II. I have discovered that when I start to tell people about Poland, showing them pictures makes it easier for them to understand the true impact. I still don’t believe that pictures capture the full impact but at least pictures have given me the opportunity to show people what this horrible place looks like. I would then explain the history that I learned at these “Holocaust centers” where we heard about the horrors and what “chemical weapons” were actually used.
During the Holocaust, large-scale gas chambers designed for mass killing were used by Nazi Germany as part of their genocide program. The Nazi concentration and extermination camps, like Auschwitz, used hydrogen cyanide in the form of Zyklon B. The first experimental gassing with Zyklon B took place at Auschwitz I. Zyklon B would stain the walls blue. Zyklon B was originally created and used for the fumigation of citrus trees in California. Zyklon B emerged as the favorite killing tool of Nazi Germany for use in extermination camps during the Holocaust. The chemical was used to kill roughly one million people in gas chambers installed in extermination camps like at Auschwitz-Birkenau. The use of this gas was devastating to the many victims of the Holocaust but especially the Jewish religion.
What I have learned since coming back from Poland a month ago is that the amount of knowledge I gained while there has given me a powerful tool. I believe that people don’t mean to mistakenly mix-up facts or mean to insult the Jewish religion, I believe it is out of ignorance. So even though Sean Spicer made a mistake in reference to World War II and the Holocaust, he is not the first one and will unfortunately not be the last one to do so, but hopefully with the knowledge that I and other secondhand witnesses have attained we can work towards a world of greater understanding of the Holocaust.
Friday, May 5, 2017
Most are Gone, but All Aren’t Forgotten
Returning home from Poland and attempting to fully explain
my experience was tough. Sharing my new
knowledge about the Soah, Pope John Paul and Krakow wasn’t difficult. Sharing pictures with my loved ones was a bit
of a struggle, merely because I remember exactly how I felt when snapping them. Oddly enough the hardest part for me, was
answering the simple question of “How was Poland?” When someone first asked me this question, I
was dumbfounded. How does one fully explain
one week of their life that was life changing, eye opening, humbling and
incredible in a few sentences?
To be honest, I don’t have an
answer for my own question and still have some trouble answering it today. However,
I found when I set aside time to have a lengthy conversation with a family
member or good friend, I can fully explain my thoughts, feelings and
experience, so talking about Poland becomes easier. I am aware that everyone who asks about my
trip to Poland doesn’t actually want to hear every detail, so I describe my
experience to him or her as educational, unimaginable, bewildering and
mournful.
Flowers left on prisoner’s sleeping area
Even though our trip was only a short period of time, everyday
I find myself being reminded of Poland and/or the Soah. For example, a few weeks ago I was conversing
with a friend about my experience on this trip.
After sharing my pictures and telling him about some of the horrifying events
that occurred, he said “I don’t understand how people could let something like
this happen. Millions of people were
being killed, and no one even tried to stop it.” My heart dropped, but I knew what I had to
tell him. I told him all about righteous
gentiles and how it is so important not to judge other people’s actions,
especially when one doesn’t fully understand another’s circumstances. I also told him that some people wanted to
help the victims, but there were high risks involved, such as death, if they
were caught. I also reminded him that terrible
events occur today around world, but not everyone is sympathy or
proactive.
I think it is important to relate
my interaction to a reading we were assigned to read. It said “More or less eight to 10 million
people go to such exhibitions around the world today, they cry, they ask why
people didn’t react more at the time, why there were so few righteous, then
they go home, see genocide on television and don’t move a finger” (Kimmelman). This was a gentile reminder that it is so
easy to look back at our not so far away past and judge the actions of others.
It is difficult to grasp how a select group of humans
decided they had the right to create this camp and others like it, in order to
carryout a systemic genocide. Its tough to comprehend the horrific events and
my experience can be hard to talk about at times. Regardless, I believe it is vital for
everyone to study this time period and remember all of those affected by the
Soah, because most are gone, but all should be remembered.
WORK CITED
Kimmelman, Michael. "Auschwitz Shifts From
Memorializing to Teaching." The New York Times. The New York Times, 18
Feb. 2011. Web. 30 Apr. 2017.