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Now More Than Ever
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Education
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Holocaust Education: Directions and Challenges
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Building Bridges of Understanding
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New on the
International School’s website
Educators’ Conference
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“Remember the
Days of Old”
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The Names Database:
“I waited 65 years to give her a kiss”
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Facing the
Future of Holocaust Remembrance
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The American Society
for Yad Vashem 25: Years of
Dedication to Holocaust Remembrance
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Eli Zborowski: A
Life Mission
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Gaining
Another Perspective: The Yad Vashem Delegation to Poland, 2006
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by Deborah Berman
After a lifetime of believing that most of her immediate family had
perished in the Holocaust, 75-year-old Hilda Shlick (née Glasberg) was
reunited with her brother Simon Glasberg on the eve of Rosh Hashanah. The
drama of the survivors’ heartfelt reunion began to unfold after Hilda’s
grandchildren searched Yad Vashem’s Central Database of Shoah Victims
Names’ in an effort to piece together the puzzle of their family’s fate.
Several months ago, a family discussion revealed to Benny and David Shlick
that their grandmother Hilda’s maiden name was, in fact, Glasberg. Curious
about their family’s history, they headed straight to their computer and
conducted a search of the online Names Database (www.yadvashem.org), which
currently contains some 3.1 million names and brief biographies of
Holocaust victims.
When they entered the name Hilda Glasberg, Benny and David were amazed to
discover that somebody named Karol Weiner, claiming to be her older
brother, had erroneously submitted a Page of Testimony in her name. After
exhaustive searches, they tracked down Karol’s son, Dr. Eric Weiner, who
told them that his father had passed away in 1999, the year he submitted
the Page of Testimony. More shocking to learn was Hilda’s parents and four
brothers had in fact survived the Holocaust.
The Glasberg family—parents Henia and Benzion Glasberg, sisters Bertha,
Hilda and Pepi, and brothers Karol, Eddie, Mark and Simon—was separated
when the Nazis invaded their home town of Chernowitz, Romania in 1941.
Hilda escaped to Uzbekistan with her older sister Bertha, who posed as
Hilda’s mother, while the others stayed in Romania, finding refuge in a
basement. That was the last the Glasberg family knew of their whereabouts,
until the recent reunion. Simon recounted his parents’ pain searching for
their daughters in vain after the war throughout Europe and Israel, and
their grief when they ultimately concluded they had not survived. “We
looked and looked and couldn’t find them,” related a tearful Glasberg at
an emotional
press conference at Yad Vashem. “My parents used to cry
whenever they remembered them.”
“We started gradually explaining to Grandma that it was possible to find
family members through the Internet,” David continued. “We didn’t want to
overwhelm her. She said she didn’t believe there was any hope for her
family, because she had already looked for them many years ago. A few days
later we told her what we had discovered, and that two of her brothers
were now living in Canada.” Hilda, who moved to Israel from Estonia in
1998, says she is finding it difficult to digest the idea: “I never
imagined that something like this could happen. I am overjoyed that after
so many years I now find out that most of my family survived,” she says.
Her brother Simon, who traveled to Israel for the reunion, could hardly
contain himself after learning that his beloved sister Hilda, whom he had
last seen as a young girl, was still alive. “Of course, I cried, the whole
world cried,” Glasberg related. “I waited 65 years to give her a kiss. I
recognized her immediately. I couldn’t stop kissing her. I am so happy
that I have finally found the sister I loved.” Hilda hopes to travel to
Canada soon to visit her parents’ and brothers’ graves and to see her
other brother, Mark, who is not well enough to travel.
Accompanying Hilda and Simon on a tour of the Hall of Names, Chairman of
the Yad Vashem Directorate Avner Shalev called upon the public to take
advantage of the High-Holiday season, to delve into their family histories
and check whether they have submitted Pages of Testimony for relatives
killed during the Holocaust. Even as Simon Glasberg basked in the joy of
seeing his sister again, he cautioned those in attendance to remember the
victims of the Shoah. “We survivors, Hilda and I, call on younger
generations of Jews never to forget us.”
Join the Names Collection Campaign
New resources and promotional materials
Posters (English, Hebrew or Russian)
advertising the ongoing campaign to collect Holocaust victims’ names may
now be ordered free of charge. Place them in your community, together with
Pages of Testimony. To order the posters, please send your name, mailing
address and phone number, stating how many you require to: names.outreach@yadvashem.org.il
with subject header: “Poster Order.”
Guidelines on who may complete a Page
of Testimony, and for whom, are now available online.
Photograph memorial boards or Jewish
tombstones bearing names of Holocaust victims in your communities’
synagogues and cemeteries. Send digital photographs to
central.database@yadvashem.org.il
with the name of the synagogue or cemetery as well as your name, address
and phone number. Printed photos may be mailed to Yad Vashem’s Hall of
Names, POB 3477, Jerusalem, Israel.
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Simon Glasberg (left) and Hilda Shlick: siblings reunited
after 65 years |