3/6/09
Interview
with Sami Steigman, Volunteer at the Jewish Heritage
Museum(By Craig R. Bayer)
Facts:
Genocide:
Geno: group
Cide: murder
The term “Holocaust” was coined by a Polish Jew in 1944.
It was officially adopted as the tragedy’s name by the United Nations in 1948.
I interviewed Sami Steigman about his various volunteer
activities, with a focus on his work for the Jewish Heritage(“Holocaust”)
museum:
How many activities are you
involved in?
Nine or ten activities…
Would you care to name some
of them?
The Make-a-Wish Foundation, the Jewish Heritage Museum, the
Red Cross, New York Cares, the Intrepid...I don’t think it’s important for you
to name all of them. I’m not an egomaniac, I don’t want this article to be
about me or to make a big deal about me.
How did you become involved
in the Holocaust museum?
Right place, right time. There was a Culturefest held in Battery Park. Various
institutions were there. I met these people, they offered me a six week course,
I took the course
What do people in this building
need to know about the Holocaust?
Hatred leads to
murder; at the slightest injustice, do not stand idly by: the Holocaust
happened because people did not stand up to anti-Semitism; it can happen again:
in Rwanda, blacks killed blacks, in Darfur, Sudan, the Hutsis killed the
Tutsis, 95% of the Tutsis were murdered—nobody lifted a finger; anti-Semitism
is prevalent, today: hate groups like the skinheads, KKK—they have to be feared
and fought. Don’t diminish the significance of fringe groups—the Nazis were
once a fringe group; accept people for
what they are—don’t discriminate; hatred is taught—babies are not born
hating—ask why you hate—accept what you are doing(hating—just like in ten step
groups--), so that you can change; learn tolerance of other people and cultures; realize that we have more in common
than our differences.
Do you remember the quote I used during our tour? “Not every
victim was a Jew, but every Jew was a victim..” They killed Greeks, Gypsies,
etc. 0f the 55 million people killed , six million were Jews. The only
difference between the Jews and everybody else was that the Jews were slated to be killed in a
systematic way.
Some members of one
of your tours were students. These students were so moved by your presentation that they did a
play in your honor and invited you to see it: The Diary of Anne Frank”. What exactly is “The Diary of Anne Frank”?
Anne Frank was a
young Jewish girl hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam, Holland. She wrote this
diary while in hiding. Eventually she was captured and killed. Why? J-E-W was
the reason.
The weird thing is that there is no such thing as a typical Jew—as Jews, we only share a religion
–Jews around the world we eat different foods, have different customs.
But we’re victims of stereotyping. Stereotyping is very
dangerous, because in every stereotype is an element of truth: Jews have big
noses, etc.. But stereotyping does not tell the entire truth.
Sami says that he is less idealistic than he was in earlier
years. However, he says, he still believes that the next generation of youth
can and should be taught about the past, in hopes that they can build a better
world. He wants today’s youth to honor the people who suffered.
He pointed out that as a result of the Holocaust many Jews
became involved in the American Civil Right’s Movement, the struggle against
Apartheid , the disaster in Darfur and many other human rights struggles,
helping to fight injustice wherever it may be.
We briefly discussed what Sami gets out of his many
activities. He says that, like I derive from my writing, it gives him a sense
of purpose, it’s therapeutic(“you don’t hink of yourself, helping others helps
you get out of yourself”).
“Until 2 years ago, I never talked about the Holocaust. The
course and the work thereafter helped change my life. Make-A-Wish also changed
my life completely. I learned about other cultures and met people from all over
the world.”
Sami recommends becoming involved in an activity you’re
seriously interested in, something for which you have passion, something which
you enjoy.
And so, the interview concluded…