Comments
Thank you, Mike Ghouse, for initiating this event,
for putting
together an excellent and very successful program, for being
so
willing to accept suggestions, and for being so courageous and taking
a
risk in bringing together such a diverse audience. For those
that
weren't there, the main speaker that evening is a Holocaust
Survivor
and Schindler's list member. She told her history from when
she was a
young child, to being forced into the Krakow ghetto at age 16, and
her
experiences and her husband's and the miracles that led to
their
survival. After the program she told me that, of the hundreds
and
hundreds of presentations she has made over the last 18 years,
she
thought this presentation to this audience turned out to be
perhaps
the most important one.
All of the speakers were
excellent. The readings from the various
liturgies were well chosen, to the
point, and abundantly clear. The
poetry readings were timely and
appropriate, and the Imam's comments
were excellent!
In these days of
renewed tension and hatred in Iran and elsewhere, the
comments from the floor
about what nonsense it is to deny the
Holocaust or to forget its lessons, and
your comments about what it
really means to be a Muslim were greatly
appreciated by everyone there.
The feedback that I heard was unanimously
positive.
Another Holcaust survivor, Nobel Laureate Elie Weisel, has
said:
"My good friends – we never try to tell the tale to make people
weep.
It is too easy. We did not want pity. If we decided to tell the
tale
- it is because we wanted the world to be a better world ."
We
would say, Mike, you have performed a great mitzvah (a blessing,
a
commandment, a good deed). Yasher koach Mike (may you remain
strong
and your strength be
renewed).
Shalom/Salaam,
Bernie