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Will History's Lessons Ever Be Learned?

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  • Will History's Lessons Ever Be Learned?

    WILL HISTORY'S LESSONS EVER BE LEARNED?
    by Anastasia Economides

    Queens Chronicle
    http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsi d=20407906&BRD=2731&PAG=461&dept_id=57 5596&rfi=6
    Feb 4 2010
    NY

    When introducing herself, Dola Polland, 88, didn't say her name.

    Instead, she pulled up her left sleeve and revealed a small tattoo:
    A18683. "A" stood for Auschwitz, she explained. The serial number
    identified her as a once Jewish prisoner in Nazi concentration camps
    during World War II.

    Polland and her husband of 53 years, Adolf Polland, were two of a
    handful of elders honored as Holocaust survivors at the Jewish Center
    of Kew Gardens Hills last week.

    It was the first Queens event observing International Holocaust
    Remembrance Day, or Yom HaShoah in Hebrew. About 150 people attended
    the evening ceremony.

    The United Nations recognized the commemoration in 2005 as paying
    tribute to those killed and those who survived one of the worst ethnic
    cleansings in human history.

    Jan. 27 marked the 65th anniversary of the liberation of
    Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi concentration camp, where an
    estimated 1.1 million people were killed. Roughly 90 percent of
    victims were Jews.

    There are approximately 240,000 Jews in Queens, according to the
    Queens Jewish Historical Society.

    This year's theme at the center was universal communication. Jeff
    Gottlieb, president of the Queens Jewish Historical Society, said the
    goal is to educate people of the terrible consequences of genocide
    in order to prevent future ones.

    "Instead of just the Jewish experience, we focus on others torn apart
    by hatred," he said.

    Sitting in the same pew at the synagogue, Polland's longtime friend,
    Regina Lewis, 90, introduced herself in the same manner, by lifting
    up her sleeve. Both women came from the same Jewish ghetto in Krakow,
    Poland, but never met until after the war, in Queens. Both now live
    in Kew Gardens Hills.

    A petite woman clad in a fur coat with clean polish on her nails,
    Lewis was easily startled by noise during the event. Even applause
    from the audience made her jump. Polland said it is a side effect
    her friend developed from the war.

    Lewis recalled the day the Soviet forces freed her and the few others
    left in the camp. She was 25 years old, with a shaved head and a
    hand-me-down dress that dragged on the floor when she walked.

    "It was chaos. I saw the electric gates open. And I ran," she said,
    smiling. "I don't know where to, I just ran."

    Polland was not as fortunate. During an attempt to vacate Auschwitz
    before the Red Army arrived, she and other prisoners were taken to
    another labor camp in Germany.

    "We walked for two and a half weeks. I didn't know what time it was
    or what country I was in. Every day was the same," she said.

    Polland was transported to yet another camp in Germany, whose name
    she can't remember, and worked as a welder before she was finally
    liberated.

    For those who can only relate to the Holocaust from history books,
    leaders of the Queens Jewish Center invited speakers of various
    cultural backgrounds to talk about other genocides that have occurred
    around the world.

    Asian-American John Tandana, vice president of the United Nations
    Association, greeted everyone with a "Shalom" and wore a white
    yarmulke. He spoke of the 1915 Armenian genocide and the Japanese
    occupation of Manchuria, where millions of Chinese civilians were
    worked to death.

    "If we confronted these tragedies before, maybe Hitler would have
    thought twice," he said.

    Professor Yaa-Lengi Ngemi, a native of the Democratic Republic of
    Congo, highlighted the more recent genocides in Rwanda, Congo, and
    Darfur. He described the horrors still taking place in Africa.

    The phrase "never again" resonated throughout all the speeches,
    including that of World War II veteran Michael Priesler, 90, of
    Richmond Hill. A Roman Catholic survivor of Auschwitz, Priesler was
    a member of the Polish resistance. He was imprisoned from 1941 to
    January 1945.

    "The SS men told me in order to be released I had to die first,"
    he said.

    The frail, red-cheeked veteran emphasized that though he is of a
    different faith, he wore the same striped uniforms as the Jews.

    Preisler beamed with joy as he repeated over and over, "I am so happy
    the murderer is finally dead. Now we can breathe a bit better."

    Entertainment was provided throughout the evening from renowned Jewish
    cantor Sol Zim, who sang of the sufferings during the Holocaust.

    The principal message was distilled in the final words of City
    Councilman James Sanders Jr. (D-Laurelton): Peace can be achieved
    through universal understanding.

    "In the end, there's one race -- the human race," Sanders said.
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