Family time -- Steve Smith
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Consider these diverse elements of a news story that never was. Tan
Michael Nguyen is a Vietnamese-American student at Mater Dei High School,
a Catholic high school in Santa Ana. On March 1, he was awarded first
place in the high school essay division of Chapman University’s third
annual Holocaust Writing Contest for his story of Aristedes de Sousa
Mendes, a Portuguese diplomat who issued visas that helped saved the
lives of thousands of Jews during World War II.
You may have heard about the heroics of de Sousa Mendes but until
right now you would never have known about Nguyen, his award or the
annual contest. That’s because despite the efforts of the Chapman
University public relations department, only one media organization chose
to send a representative to cover this landmark Orange County event.
As a last minute fill-in, fate put me at Chapman University as that
representative.
While the rest of the Orange County’s media was busy trying to make
Measure W out to be a close call instead of the slam dunk that it was,
and while they presented to us over and over again the identical twins
that were the Republican choices for governor, they missed the story of
the year thus far.
Had they been at Chapman University on March 1, the local media would
have heard Irene Gut Opdyke who, as the Jewish housemaid for a German
officer, hid 12 Jews in the basement of his house. With Opdyke’s help,
all 12 survived. In an era when the term “victim” is used far too
casually, Opdyke truly qualifies for the title. Yet, she denied her
audience any such pity and proclaimed that day that “Hate never solved
anything.”
Had the media been at Chapman, they would have heard Leon Leyson, the
youngest survivor of “Schindler’s list,” tell the story of his brother,
Tsalig, who refused Schindler’s railway station offer of safety and chose
instead to accompany his girlfriend to a death camp because he did not
want her to be alone. There, they were both murdered by Nazis. More than
60 years later, Leyson still cannot tell his brother’s story without
tears in his eyes.
It was also hard to listen without tears in the eyes.
But most important, the media missed the chance to see some of the
best and brightest middle and high school students in our county mingle
with and honor the bravest in the Southland, for there were several
members of “1939 Club,” death camp survivors, among the audience. These
are people whose courage and will to live must be a benchmark for the
rest of us. The generations collided that day as both young and old
helped ensure that we never forget what a government unchecked may
unleash on its citizens.
Some of those best and brightest were from Corona del Mar High School.
Anna Cheong, Alissa Yamazaki and senior student Natalia Sebag submitted
entries for consideration by the judges. Sebag wrote about her
grandmother, who is a Holocaust survivor.
“My grandmother had to hide in nunneries pretending to be a Catholic
girl,” Sebag told me. “She called the nuns her ‘angels.”’
The young people present at Chapman that day represent the last
generation that will hear the holocaust testimonials directly from the
lips of the victims. I applaud our three Corona del Mar students for
their initiative and involvement in this contest.
Marilyn Harran is the director of the Rodgers Center for Holocaust
Education at Chapman. In a conversation after the awards ceremony, Harran
told me that she has run into apathy over her subject because, her
contacts told her, they were “Holocausted out,” a comment that concerns
me because it sounds more like a hip buzzword than a legitimate reason
to forget one of the most tragic events in human history.
This is a time when our leaders must be very careful about maintaining
the balance between ensuring domestic tranquillity and preserving the
right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Read the newspaper
and you will see story after story about Americans being released from
jails, held for crimes they did not commit, and of people of Middle East
descent or appearance who have been released from federal custody because
it was eventually determined that they had no connections whatsoever to
any terrorist organization. Like the Jews and other oppressed ethnic
groups across East Europe during World War II, they were turned in by
people who had no evidence, only suspicion.
Even at her young age, Sebag understood the importance of Holocaust
remembrance: “I think it’s important because part of our heritage is to
pass on knowledge so that we don’t make the same mistakes.”
We owe the debt of Holocaust remembrance to our children. I am only a
part-time journalist, but I have a full-time conscience and to the local
media, I am compelled to state only three words: You blew it.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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