Perhaps none of you check this blog yet, but just in case, I wanted to update you on a few things. First of all, I saw "Valkyrie" last night and it was amazing! You should see it. I can't wait to see "Defiance" in a few weeks!!! Secondly, I just bought The Book Thief and I will let you know how I like it. Finally, unfortunately, I got the following email this morning from the Executive Director of my Tennessee Holocaust Commission Fellows Program. It is in regard to the story I read to my classes all about the man and woman who supposedly met later in life and had been at the same camp, but on different sides. It has been proven to be fraud. Feel free to read below:
From Jodi:
I do not know if any of you have told this story your classroom-but sadly it has been exposed as a fake. It is hard enough to comprehend the Holocaust for its own historical event so it is very troubling when individuals embellish the experience.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gqrb4uMpbj8D7T-XHwX0ylu0Q-0AD95BQUR00
Anger, sadness over fabricated Holocaust story
By HILLEL ITALIE – 22 hours ago
NEW YORK (AP) — It's the latest story that touched, and betrayed, the world.
"Herman Rosenblat and his wife are the most gentle, loving, beautiful people," literary agent Andrea Hurst said Sunday, anguishing over why she, and so many others, were taken by Rosenblat's story of love born on opposite sides of a barbed-wire fence at a concentration camp.
"I question why I never questioned it. I believed it; it was an incredible, hope-filled story."
On Saturday, Berkley Books canceled Rosenblat's memoir, "Angel at the Fence." Rosenblat acknowledged that he and his wife did not meet, as they had said for years, at a sub-camp of Buchenwald, where she allegedly sneaked him apples and bread. The book was supposed to come out in February.
Rosenblat, 79, has been married to the former Roma Radzicky for 50 years, since meeting her on a blind date in New York. In a statement issued Saturday through his agent, he described himself as an advocate of love and tolerance who falsified his past to better spread his message.
"I wanted to bring happiness to people," said Rosenblat, who now lives in the Miami area. "I brought hope to a lot of people. My motivation was to make good in this world."
Rosenblat's believers included not only his agent and his publisher, but Oprah Winfrey, film producers, journalists, family members and strangers who ignored, or didn't know about, the warnings from scholars that his story didn't make sense.
Other Holocaust memoirists have devised greater fantasies. Misha Defonseca, author of "Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years," pretended she was a Jewish girl who lived with wolves during the war, when she was actually a non-Jew who lived, without wolves, in Belgium.
Historical records prove Rosenblat was indeed at Buchenwald and other camps.
"How sad that he felt he had to embellish a life of surviving the Holocaust and of being married for half a century," said Holocaust scholar Michael Berenbaum.
The damage is broad. Publishing, the most trusting of industries, has again been burned by a memoir that fact-checking might have prevented. Berkley is an imprint of Penguin Group (USA), which in March pulled Margaret B. Jones' "Love and Consequences" after the author acknowledged she had invented her story of gang life in Los Angeles. Winfrey fell, as she did with James Frey, for a narrative of suffering and redemption better suited for television than for history.
The damage is deep. Scholars and other skeptics as well as fellow survivors fear that Rosenblat's fabrications will only encourage doubts about the Holocaust.
"I am very worried because many of us speak to thousands of student each year," says Sidney Finkel, a longtime friend of Rosenblat's and a fellow survivor. "We go before audiences. We tell them a story and now some people will question what I experienced."
"This was not Holocaust education but miseducation," Ken Waltzer, director of Jewish Studies at Michigan State University, said in a statement.
"Holocaust experience is not heartwarming, it is heart rending. All this shows something about the broad unwillingness in our culture to confront the difficult knowledge of the Holocaust," Waltzer said. "All the more important then to have real memoirs that tell of real experience in the camps."
Among the fooled, at least the partially fooled, was Berenbaum, former director of the United States Holocaust Research Institute at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. Berenbaum had been asked to read the manuscript by film producer Harris Salomon, who still plans an adaptation of the book.
Berenbaum's tentative support — "Crazier things have happened," he told The Associated Press last fall — was cited by the publisher as it initially defended the book. Berenbaum now says he saw factual errors, including Rosenblat's description of Theresienstadt, the camp from which he was eventually liberated, but didn't think of challenging the love story.
"There's a limit to what I can verify, because I was not there," he says. "I can verify the general historical narrative, but in my research I rely upon the survivors to present the specifics of their existence with integrity. When they don't, they destroy so much and they ruin so much, and that's terrible."
"I was burned," he added. "And I have to read books more skeptically because I was burned."
Monday, December 29, 2008
Update to a Few Things
Posted by A. Davis at 8:05 AM 1 comments
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
EOP Update
The Educational Outreach Program at Vanderbilt University, sponsored by the Irwin and Elizabeth Limor Foundation and the Tennessee Holocaust Commission, was yesterday. We went early and met with some of the other Fellows and their students where we had Nerf gun fights and played poker for Starburst. :) All in all, it was a great trip. I will admit that I had envisioned us sitting around in a big circle, discussing Holocaust literature and the genocide in Darfur, which did not happen. :) However, the kids were great and we had a lot of fun together.
The Program was so wonderful. The theme was Hidden Messages: Nazi Propaganda and it was such a timely theme with our election coming up. (Not that either of our parties compare to the Nazi's, but you certainly see major propaganda during an election year!) We had three breakout sessions, one with Ann Miller from the USHMM where we analyzed propaganda posters in small groups, one with Paul Fleming from the THC and principal at Humme-Fogg Magnet School where we discussed contemporary genocides and the role that science and "true, proven facts" play in propaganda, and one with Jan Hattleberg who is an art teacher where we created our own advertisements using quotes from Obama, McCain, or Hitler. The hands-on work was very enjoyable.
After lunch, we ended the day by hearing from Frances Cutler. She is a Holocaust survivor who was a hidden child. She was three years old when her mother sent her to an orphanage in Paris to save her life. Her mother was murdered at Auschwitz and her father died as a French resistance fighter. Her story was so moving and she was such a sweet, approachable lady. More of her story can be read on the "Living On" site.
The two day trip was wonderful and I am so glad that we went. Thanks to Josh, Ashley, Adam, Elizabeth, Isaac, and Paulina, for going with me. You guys were great and I was proud to be represented by you! :)
Posted by A. Davis at 7:25 PM 1 comments
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Educational Outreach Program
I just wanted to post (to nowhere and no one, apparently) that I am SO excited to be attending the Educational Outreach Program put on by the Tennessee Holocaust Commission and the Elizabeth Limor Foundation at Vanderbilt University tomorrow! I am equally excited that some of the other Teacher Fellows with me will be attending with their students as well and we are all staying the night together at the mission Jill and her husband run. How cool to have an evening with students from across the state, all passionate about Holocaust education! I will update after Monday's seminar with all of the new and exciting facts I learned and the amazing survivor testimony I am sure to hear. I will also be addressing a new audience by then, as the students who are traveling with me are in Holocaust Literature next semester and will surely be checking this blog after this weekend! :)
Posted by A. Davis at 8:20 AM 3 comments