Take a close look at these two women. One is 19, the other is 90. That’s the only difference. It’s the same woman. The woman on the cover, my mother Sipora Groen is now 90 years old. The second picture was taken on Wednesday night April 18 at a synagogue in Elkins Park, Pa. where she spoke for Holocaust Remembrance Day.
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Holland’s Experience:Test your knowledge
In a continuous effort to increase Holocaust awareness, I have put together a series of questions regarding what the Dutch community went through during the Nazi-occupation. The answers are at the bottom of the page. Comments are welcome and well be posted after moderation.
1-What percentage of Amsterdam was Jewish in 1940?
2-How many Dutch Jews were murdered in the Death camps?
3-What was the name of the concentration camp in Holland set up to accommodate German refugees in the 1930s and later used as a transit center?
4-What was the name of the Death camp where an estimated 34,000 Dutch Jews were murdered?
5-In what concentration camp did Anne Frank die?
These are just 5 questions but they will give an indication of what you know about what Holland experienced during this time. The more we know, the more we can increase awareness and fight those who try to claim it never happened. Again, your feedback is welcome.
Answers-10% 2-104,000 3-Westerbork 4-Sobibor 5-Bergen-Belsen
The Life That Was Not Lived
The following piece written by my father of blessed memory is the Foreword for the book “Jew Face: A story of love and heroism in Nazi-occupied Holland.” It is extremely appropriate for Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day).
FOREWORD
by Rabbi Nardus Groen, of blessed memory
The life that was not lived:
This is the story of two people whose experiences cannot be seen as
separated from one another. At the same time, it includes a multitude of people
whose story will never be told. We therefore consider it a privilege as well as a
duty to share with you some of the 4,380 days of our being on this earth.
Existence is more or less a state of exposure. Life, on the other hand,
is a matter of faith. If there was such a thing, my choice would be for
something in between. Some attributes may be applied to it, and others
may not fit the shoe.
We may in the course of it meet people who, for whatever it’s worth,
may be portrayed as heroes, while others are cowards, pacifists, or activists.
They are all the products of mankind. For them, there will always be a
place under the sun (with the exception of the traitor). But being as we are
a homogenous society, no one can ever be left out. And as it is by the very
inclination of the human race, the dark shadow of the wicked will play an
overpowering role in leaving behind the marks in the way of scars brought
upon them by society.
If the worst could ever be turned into good, the only lesson to be learned
of that is, never ever forget. For in the past lay the present, and in the present
the future. Without that, we will be repeating our mistakes and shortcomings,
and as a result the world will not be the place it was created to be.
In order to live, you still have to be able to somehow believe in the
goodness of mankind. In that light, we will start with our first words to
describe that which has been and never should have been.
Remembering The Holocaust-A Personal Perspective
Being the child of Holocaust survivors I have been exposed to the reality of what took place from the time of my earliest memories. Naturally my understanding of the events developed as I grew older, but from a young age the one thing I knew was that my parents went through something not everyone else’s parents went through. I never knew my grandparents. My mother’s mother passed away many years before the war, but her father and my father’s mother and father were all killed in Auschwitz.
As I grew up I went through this stage where I thought that my parents had a pretty easy go of it in the war. After all, they didn’t have numbers on their arms and my mother was never even arrested by the Nazis. How bad could it have been? That stage did not last long as I soon began to gather a more educated understanding of my parents’ experience.
I believe it started with me trying to imagine the relatives I never knew. I would think of my father’s parents. Listening to the stories my father would tell, I would always feel a special connection to his father. One I could not explain rationally or logically. I just felt a somewhat mystical bond. His mother would seem to me like a woman with a quiet demeanor but strong willed character. My father would always speak with them with nothing but respect which inevitably would translate to how I and I presume the rest of my siblings would perceive them.
I would then try to imagine my mother’s father. He always seemed like the man everyone wanted to meet at least once. He was an athlete, outgoing, successful in business, while being somewhat mysterious. At least that would be how it looked through my young eyes. And then I would think of my mother’s brother and all I would see was a sweet, talented, and gentle young man who should have had a chance to live in an easier time. I knew my mother loved them both deeply and that remembering them was more emotional than almost anything else.
I would imagine all of them and try to picture them. How they lived, how they spoke, how they might have spoken to me. At one point however I realized that when imagining them my imagination never left Amsterdam. I could not imagine them being picked up in a raid and stuffed on a train to ultimately wind up in Auschwitz. And I most certainly could not imagine them being killed in the gas chambers. I could not imagine any of this. It was just too difficult. And I never even knew them.
It is hard to conceive the horrors experienced by the murdered victims of Nazi Germany. Of the 6 million Jews who were murdered during this time, many were tortured, beaten, raped, used for experimentation, and made to suffer in ways that a normal mind cannot even begin to conceive. And for those who experienced this level of suffering and survived, to make an attempt to comprehend what they felt would have to be impossible.
True, my parents did not have those specific experiences. What they had to endure was running from an enemy that would certainly kill them, hiding in whatever location they could find regardless of the conditions, being so deprived of food that fresh bread and butter seemed like a luxury, and finding out that almost everyone they knew, loved, played with, studied with and laughed with, was gone. Taken away forever. Earlier today I closed my eyes and tried to imagine being in a New York where 75% of the Jewish community was gone and in a world where the majority of my family was suddenly dead. I could not do it. It was just too difficult emotionally. For my parents and for so many like them, they did not have the luxury of opening their eyes and going back to a better reality. The reality was brutal and would never ever be altered. All it could be was remembered.
The Holocaust the Jewish people suffered through was of such an enormous magnitude that the people who went through these horrors on whatever level they did are called survivors, when in fact they too were victims.
There are various factors that have contributed to the survival of the Jewish people since the horrors of Nazi Germany. A case can be made for any one of many reasons being most important. Some would say it is the existence of the State of Israel, while others might say the commitment of the Ultra-Orthodox or the traditional Jew, while others may say it is the activist who will fight either physically or verbally in defense of the Jewish people. One thing is certain. It is not because of the person who does nothing. Until recently I considered myself one who did nothing. Although I have always been proud to be a Jew, I’ve never felt like I did enough. On this eve of Yom HaShoah, I feel a responsibility like never before to be a voice that reminds people of what happened and to fight those with the gall to claim it never did.
It may be too painful for me to imagine, but it is even more painful to my soul to allow myself to ever forget.
Remembering 6 Million
Tonight, 1 day before Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, I will be sharing with you a post on my deepest feelings on the significance of the day.
Sobibor: Part 2
This is Part 2 of the documentary about Sobibor Death camp where 34,000 of the 104,000 Dutch victims were murdered. Sobibor was so bad that it was said that if someone went to Auschwitz they had a chance. If they went to Sobibor they did not. To see Part 1 click here.
Complete List of Names in the book “Jew Face”
Now you can find a complete listing of every name mentioned in the book “Jew Face: A story of love and heroism in Nazi-occupied Holland”. Check back regularly as links will be added to provide more information about the most relevant characters in the book.
To go to the Page CLICK HERE or click the header on the Home Page of the site.
Fighting A Cancer
As a son of Holocaust survivors it would be obvious why remembering what happened to the Jewish people during the reign of the Nazis would be of importance and significance to me. What I am going to attempt to do in this post is briefly show why it should be important to everyone.
There is a cancer in the world today. This cancer is the movement known as Holocaust denial. I am Jewish, and on this site and the book I have written there is a focus on the horrors that befell the Jewish people. I make no apologies for where I focus my efforts. However, I also recognize that although 6 million is a staggering number, the Jewish people are not alone in their suffering. Whether it was African slave trading, the Khmer Rouge’s Cambodian genocide, the policy of “ethnic cleansing” in Bosnia, the genocides in Cyprus, Rwanda, and Darfur, our world has been tarnished by numerous examples of mass persecution and genocide. I am making no attempt to compare suffering, and I am not missing out on mentioning any group intentionally. All I have done is take some notable examples of mass persecution and genocide in history to make an important point.
Cancer usually begins in one part of the body. The cancer of Holocaust denial, a cause that is meant to belittle the suffering of the Jewish people during Nazi occupation in Europe and challenge its severity and magnitude, does not only threaten the Jewish people, one part of the world’s body, it threatens all decent people, and all healthy parts of the world body.
How can we say “NEVER AGAIN”, if we have to fight those who want to challenge that it happened in the first place. Ignore a cancer and it spreads. And when it spreads it poisons the entire body.









