Sunday, April 6, 2008

Your Responsibility



You all had an opportunity on Thursday to do something that very few people in your generation have gotten to do, and fewer and fewer people in the future will do. You (Holocaust Lit and English II) got to hear the story of Sonja DuBois, a survivor of the Holocaust. I really don't want to post a bunch of questions on here or put words in your mouths. I mainly want to hear your response to her story.

I will tell you that I was so interested in what she said about the moment that she decided to start sharing her story with others was when she saw the Bible study about Esther and realized that she, too, lived a double life. And just like Esther, there were lots of people involved in saving Sonja. I, as a parent, cannot imagine what her parents must have felt when they left her at the station, her mother who put the necklace around her neck, and then walked away. Even if I KNEW, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Emma and Kelsey would be safer left behind (and her parents didn't KNOW), I cannot fathom what it would feel like to put them in the arms of a stranger to them and walk away, not knowing what would become of them. The pain they must have suffered at that moment probably hurt so much more than the death they encountered later. I also was staggered by how much we take for granted with our own lives, in that we all have people who can tell our life stories, who we look like, act like, and so on. She has no one in her life who can do that for her.

I said I wasn't going to put words in your mouths and I guess I did. I could probably write forever about my response to her story and the feelings it stirred in me. She was so arresting, such a powerful speaker, yet so approachable. But now, the responsibility lies with you and me. We are among the few people who have heard first hand the story of a Holocaust survivor. What, now, will we do with it? Sonja's story lives on with us. Her parents live on in us, because we know the sacrifice they made so that she could live to tell. It is your duty, your obligation, to bear witness when the time comes that no one is alive to say, "I was there. It happened to my family. I saw the camps. I lived it." YOU will have to stand up and say, "I heard the story of a survivor. I saw the necklace her mother left her, saw the one surviving photograph of her parents." It did happen, and we have to make sure that the lessons learned are applied to our daily lives.

I guess that's my sermon for the day.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm not sure if you want us to comment on this or not...but I just want to say that Mrs. Dubois's story was remarkable and it was a totally different one from the others I have heard. I have heard about four Holocaust survivors speak, and though they have the same background, they are very different. It was even more interesting to learn about her birth parents and other family members teaching her about her own life, which the Nazis tried to take from her. She has made her own life and is very successful. I love hearing the actual survivors speak!

Anonymous said...

Mrs. Davis, the pictures you've added to the blog are GREAT! I love having visuals with the posts... :)

Anonymous said...

Mrs. Davis, I am so thankful we had the chance to listen to Mrs. Dubois's story about her journey through the Holocaust. She was a very inspirational speaker to me and I am sure to many other students. I have heard other survivors speak, but Mrs. Dubois had a different twist to her story. It was very interesting to hear how she has still been learing new things about her life and her parents lifes. I really do hope we will get to experiance listening to another survivor speak.
Hillary

Josh said...

Amen Mrs. Davis! :)

It was such a blessing to hear Mrs. DuBois speak with us the other day. You are exactly right Mrs. Davis, her story now lives within us and we will never forget her speaking to us. Very very few people have the chance to ask a Holocaust Survivor questions like our class did.

Mrs. DuBois is an excellent speaker. I have to agree with Hillary, she is a very inspirational to me also. I could just feel her spirit as she was speaking to us.

Everything she said is now in our hearts forever. We'll never forget her and her testimony will NEVER die!

-Josh

Anonymous said...

I really like Mrs. DuBois coming and speaking with us. I loved to hear her story because it is so unique and different than other holocaust survivor stories. Even though she was a child and a lot she didn't know about, like her parents and things like that, i still think she went into great depth and told us her life. I really liked it when she started us out asking what was one thing that has been given to us that we love dearly. She really knew how to react with us. I thought that experience was amazing!!