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Mapping Auschwitz today in LA for International Holocaust Remembrance Day & Survivor Henry Oertelt’s Yahrzeit

27 Jan

Today is Author and Holocaust Survivor Henry Oertelt’s Yahrzeit – the one year anniversary of his death. He died at age 90 after speaking about his experiences surviving the Holocaust for almost forty years. Coincidentally this is also International Holocaust Remembrance Day and the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

I optioned Henry’s book, An Unbroken Chain: My Journey through the Nazi Holocaust when he was eighty-seven years old. I knew that time was of the essence. After we came to an agreement, we traveled to Minnesota and met him in person with the rest of his family one memorable September weekend.

Henry read my first draft of the screenplay adaptation of his book and gave us his blessing for the project. After a few years of research, I started volunteering at the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust as a docent. Then, the Museum recently came on board as our fiscal partner, giving us credibility and more exposure. After a few years of fundraising, we came up with enough money to produce a high quality short film. We felt this was better than doing nothing. If this film moves people, it could still evolve into a feature length film.

We are now in postproduction with our short film with the working title, Bashert – which means “Meant to Be.” We look forward to sharing it with everyone in the coming months.

Additionally, to commemorate this important day in history, the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust and their community partners will mark an area the same size as Auschwitz around Los Angeles with a flash event.

To participate, go to their map (sign in with your Google account) and pick your location to participate in this exciting event.

You can also sign up for our text message alert which will update and inform you about Mapping Auschwitz news. To join, text the phrase mapLA to 25827.

Check out the museum website to learn more.

ADL Holocaust Education Training Features Our Subject’s Story

7 Nov

Friday I had the opportunity to participate in a Holocaust Educators training put on by the Anti Defamation League (ADL),  USC Shoah Foundation and Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum of Israel. They distributed copies of Echoes and Reflections, a new multimedia curriculum on the Holocaust. This program allows teachers to choose as little or as much material as they can cover in a specific time period and still cover the subject matter effectively.

On page one, chapter one, they have used a quote from my dear friend, Holocaust Survivor, ninety-six year old Kurt Messerschmidt. Kurt is the brother of Henry Oertelt, my former mentor and author of An Unbroken Chain: My Journey Through the Nazi Holocaust. We have optioned Henry’s book in to produce a feature film based on the brothers’amazing survival story. Henry passed away earlier this year at age 90.

Kurt’s quote says,

(more…)

Witnessing a miracle: Just another day in Survivor Ela Weissberger’s charmed life

15 Aug

We got to hear Holocaust Survivor, Ela Weissberger, speak Thursday night at the LA Museum of the Holocaust, where I’m a docent. She was an engaging speaker. Ela is one of the subjects of As Seen Through These Eyes, a film by Hilary Helstein, who also runs the LA Jewish Film Festival. As Maya Angelou narrates this powerful documentary, she reveals the story of a brave group of people who fought Hitler with the only weapons they had: charcoal, pencil stubs, shreds of paper and memories etched in their minds. These artists took their fate into their own hands to make a compelling statement about the human spirit, enduring against unimaginable odds. There are also other documentaries and features under way that are based on Ela’s unusual life story. Ela performed as “Cat” fifty-five times in Brundibar, the children’s opera in Theresenstadt, (or Terezin) ghetto in Czechoslavakia during the Holocaust. As a result, Ela was one of only 100 survivors out of 15,000 children at that camp.

Ela Reunites w/ Terezin Baby

The surprise of the evening was when one of the attendees asked Ela a question and indicated that she had been born in the camp. Ela responded that she only knew one pregnant woman, and said her name was Ishmar (sp?). The woman cried, “That’s my mother!” Ela looked dumbfounded as she realized that a baby of a family she knew during that terrible period had survived and made it to the U.S. Later she told us, these kind of coincidences happen to her all the time.

Yesterday, we attended the LA Opera Camp performance of Brundibar. Brundibar tells the story of a young brother and sister trying to buy milk for their sick mother. After witnessing an organ grinder earning money by making music in the town square, they decide to do the same thing but the greedy and unkind organ grinder drives them away. Ela told us that the mustache-sporting organ grinder was representative of Hitler. She said all the kids knew what the opera was really about and wasn’t sure why the Nazis allowed them to continue performing it, but they did. The Nazis filmed the performance as part of the propaganda films they were shooting to deceive the Red Cross as well as the rest of the world.

Brundibar performed by the LA Opera Camp

At the end of yesterday’s performance, Ela, who is one of only 2 remaining original cast members, got on stage and spoke to the audience and then sang along to the final song with the cast of local children.

I called my friend Henry Oertelt’s older brother, ninety-six year old Kurt Messerschmidt today, to ask if he had seen the children’s opera while he was at the camp and related the story of Ela’s reunion with Ishmar’s baby. He said that it was a miracle that the baby survived the conditions of being born into the camp. He had heard of it, but never seen Brundibar. He wished me well with our An Unbroken Chain film project and told me he was enjoying his summer. We were both sad as we remembered Henry, who died only this January at age ninety. Big Brother Kurt felt Henry should have cut back on his speaking sooner so that he might have had more energy and possibly lived longer. I don’t know, though. I think some of the Survivors who speak at the museum have more energy than anyone I know. Eighty-one year old Ela is a great example of that high energy. We were even told that she still loves to go dancing into the wee hours.

Auschwitz-Birkenau visit

10 Aug

A student named Rachel Weronika shared this video of her photos of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp and uploads from the Internet. Song: “Fear” by OneRepublic.

Take a Tour at the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust

15 Jul

As you may know, I’m a new docent at the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust. I recently gave my first medium size public tour. I was pretty nervous, but I think it went well. I had between ten and fifteen people.

The museum is divided into major sections and takes the visitor through the events in chronological order:
The World that Was
Rise to Nazism
The Beginning of the War and Ghettoization
Camps
Resistance
Liberation and Post War Issues including Holocaust and Music

It seems crazy to try to explain the Holocaust in less than an hour. I kept encouraging my group to return with our complementary audio guides so they could get more detailed information. No matter what I point out, afterwards I always feel I missed something important. However, after the tour, I also thought, wow, I really have picked up where my “adopted grandfather” and mentor, Holocaust Survivor, Henry Oertelt, left off. He taught the lessons of the Holocaust by sharing his life story with schools, groups and all kinds of organizations in the Minnesota area for about 40 years. I hope he would be pleased.

One question that caught me off guard was: Was Hitler’s grandmother really Jewish? The museum’s answer: there is no proof of that, it’s still just a rumor. I thought it might be interesting to start to share some of the questions and answers that come up in my tour from now on.

Our museum is the oldest Holocaust museum in the U.S., however, we just opened a new permanent building last October. Typically a Holocaust Survivor speaks every day around 11am. We are located right in Pan Pacific Park near the Grove. Plan a trip soon!

LA Museum of the Holocaust Volunteer Appreciation Lunch

24 Jun

I was fortunate to be invited to have lunch with Holocaust Survivors, other docents and interns who volunteer for the LA Museum of the Holocaust yesterday. Even though I’ve only given one tour by myself, I too, got upgraded from a “volunteer” to a “docent” badge and I will be spending the summer giving informal tours. Come by on Thursday afternoons and say hello.

My sister asked me if it isn’t depressing to keep telling the story over and over. I told her about the warm, giving people I’ve met at the museum – especially the Holocaust Survivors, who continue to share their stories to honor their families and friends who were killed. For me, it is exciting to go to the museum and get to participate in helping educate students and visitors. The museum will inspire people to stand up for what’s right and speak up. Yesterday, someone told me they think there are more good people in the world than bad. I hope they are right.

Holocaust Survivor Speakers Honored at LA Museum of the Holocaust

Ilaria our Education Coordinator


Mark Rothman the Museum's Executive Director

Holocaust Survivor Albert Rosa Displays His War Medals

Lunch in the Children's Memorial

LA Museum of the Holocaust

First Congregational Church offers Yom Hashoah service Sunday May 1

29 Apr

A friend and I were happily surprised to see that First Congregational Church, is hosting their own Yom Hashoah services on Sunday, May 1, at 11 am at 540 S. Commonwealth Avenue in LA. Their ad quotes Dr. R. Scott Colglaizer, a senior minister, “I want to focus on the importance of remembering the Holocaust, and how we, as Christians, have a special moral obligation to make sure this will never happen again. Religiously motivated hate and inhumanity cannot be tolerated.”

Then, at 2pm, they are hosting a concert called Forgotten Voices, featuring Ryan Ross, who sings the works of Jewish composers exiled or murdered during the Holocaust. This special event is recognized by the Austrian, German, and Israeli embassies.

It is our job to teach acceptance and hope for the next generation.

LA Museum of the Holocaust Weekend Hours Debate

3 Apr

The Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust has submitted a request to the City of Los Angeles to amend the Museum’s lease to increase weekend operating hours. Approximately 3,000 visitors have come to the Museum on Sundays since opening in October 2010. Sunday is their most popular day of the week. In order to better serve the Los Angeles community, the Museum hopes to open on Saturdays.



pictured: two of our LA Holocaust Survivors speaking to students

The Los Angeles Parks and Recreation Advisory Board recently voted to keep the Museum closed on Saturday and to push for Sunday closure. Their decision was based on a concern over a possible increased demand for parking at Pan Pacific Park. The Museum provided the Advisory Committee with a parking strategy that would not require a single space to be used in Pan Pacific Park’s parking lot, but this was dismissed.

The museum was in the works for several years. I wonder why they wouldn’t have anticipated this concern sooner? Most museums get the bulk of their visitors on the weekends.

Help them convey to the Los Angeles Parks and Recreation Board of Commissioners the importance of being open on weekend days! The Board of Commissioners will vote on this issue at their April 6th meeting and they can choose to ignore the advice of the Park Advisory Board.

Below you will find sample text for an email to the Board of Commissioners. Please contact RAP.COMMISSIONERS@LACITY.ORG and CC info@lamoth.org on your email.

The support of their visitors and the community will help educate the Board of Commissioners about the importance of weekend visits to the Museum.

Please also consider attending the April 6th meeting. The Museum will provide free transportation to the meeting.

Sample Email:

_____, 2011
Dear Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Board
of Commissioners,

I support the opening of the Los Angeles Museum of the
Holocaust on weekend days. The Museum is a vital part of
our community as it provides free Holocaust education to
the public. To not allow the Museum to open on weekend
days would be a mortal blow as it decreases the opportunity
for the public to visit. Due to work, the only available time I
have to visit the Museum is on weekend days. Weekends
are also the only time when I can bring family and friends to
the Museum.
Please add a personal note here:
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
Sincerely,
Please provide your contact information:
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________

Thank you for your support!

Hate to Hope Metamorphis

15 Feb

Rachel Hain, a 12th grader from Turpin High School in Cincinnati, Ohio, shared this video with us. Kudos to Rachel and her fellow classmates on actively participating in sharing their new knowledge of the subject in a positive way.

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