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Lifesaver J. Larry Brown's hero is Gerda Weissmann Klein, a Holocaust survivor who has dedicated her life to fighting the problem of hunger. Brown says that Klein "shows every day of her life that not even the worst of tragedy can beat the best of the human spirit."


In the bitter winter months of 1945, the Nazis forced 2000 women slave laborers on a 350-mile death march. On May 7, 1945, a young American Army lieutenant named Kurt Klein
Photo courtesy of Jewish Virtual Library
liberated the 120 skeletal survivors remaining from that march, including one 21-year-old who would change his life.

Barely alive and weighing only 68 pounds, Gerda Weissmann demonstrated an indomitable spirit and faith in the goodness of man that stunned the young GI. From that first encounter between a survivor and a soldier whose own parents had perished in Auschwitz, they developed a love that would lead to a marriage of 56 years, three children and eight grandchildren - and a partnership to fight for human rights.

A recipient of many honors, including six honorary doctorates, the Lion of Judah Award, and the Human Rights Award given by the National Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights, Gerda Klein has been featured on 60 Minutes and appeared with husband, Kurt, on Nightline following their inspiring meeting with parents, teachers, and students at Columbine High School after the tragedy there in 1999. She has authored several books including All But My Life upon which the Emmy and Academy Award-winning documentary One Survivor Remembers is based.

Excerpt from a fall 2000 lecture held at Chapman University's Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education.

"It's a holy cause to feed a hungry child."

HERO'S HERO:
GERDA KLEIN

Photo courtesy of
Carl Cox Photography
Ilse, a childhood friend of mine, once found a raspberry in the concentration camp and carried it in her pocket all day to present to me that night on a leaf. Imagine a world in which your entire possession is one raspberry and you give it to your friend.

Photo courtesy of The Klein Foundation
Gerda Klein has told this story and many others about her life to millions of people throughout the world. Klein was living a happy childhood in southern Poland when German soldiers invaded in September, 1939. In time she would lose her entire family except for one uncle. She was in the Czech town of Volary when a Jewish lieutenant named Kurt Klein helped liberate a group of survivors, including Gerda. The two would marry and begin a life together.

Gerda and her husband established the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation to combat hunger and intolerance. The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation partners with Dr. J. Larry Brown's Center on Hunger and Poverty, and with other national organizations to carry out their mutual mission to end hunger and promote tolerance and human rights.

Photo courtesy of Carl Cox Photography
Gerda Klein was a featured guest speaker at a dinner held in Los Angeles in January, 2002 to raise awareness about ending Childhood Hunger in America. Gerda has received numerous honors including an Academy Award for her documentary about the Holocaust. The following excerpts were taken from the powerful message she shared at an event for Children Uniting Nations and Hunger Free America:

It has been my mission and my incredible joy to be speaking to kids all over the country and I’ve been asked this question in almost every community: 'How did it feel for you, a Holocaust survivor, to be standing on stage (at the Academy of Arts and Sciences) holding an (Academy Award winning) Oscar in your hand?'

Photo courtesy of
The Holocaust History Project
I should tell you what I thought. I remember the long days on the death march, the bitter cold, the hunger, the loneliness, and the fear. I stood with a rusty bowl in my hands praying that when I got to the end of the line there should be enough food left in the kettle, and if by some miracle the ladle went deeper and brought forth a potato, I was a winner. I don’t want our children and grandchildren to live in a world where a potato is more valuable than an Oscar, but I don’t want them to be in a world where an Oscar is so important, forgive me, that one forgets that so many still don’t have a potato. This, my friends, is what it’s all about.

How blessed we are to be able to reach out to stamp out intolerance and hatred and feed the children, our future.

Photo courtesy of Karen L. Simonetti

And I have been asked 'Why did you go on?' in those bitter days when I lost everyone I loved. My dream, I kept in my heart and pulled it out when the going was rough, was a picture: I could see my childhood home, my father smoking his pipe and reading the evening paper, my mother working at her needlepoint, my brother and I doing our homework, and I stood struck by the enormity of the thought that those were the evenings I took totally for granted. I called them boring evenings at home. To be a part of one such evening became the driving force for my own survival.

Photo courtesy of Aish International
When you return to your homes, approach them slowly. Approach them as a hungry, nameless stranger would, and through the eyes of the stranger do not see what is missing but what is there.

Ask yourself, 'Why am I so lucky? Why am I so blessed?' Ask yourself, 'What can I do for those people in our country for whom an evening at home is still Utopia?'

The Klein Foundation has established educational programs for middle and high school students. One of the programs teaches tolerance, acceptance, and hope. The other, entitled "KNOW Hunger," focuses on developing local community service programs to combat hunger.

Following the tragic shooting at Columbine High School May 7, 1999, the Kleins travelled to Littleton, Colorado to speak to students and teachers about tolerating difference and ending bigotry.

Photo courtesy of The Klein Foundation

Kurt Klein died April 19, 2002 at the age of 81. He was on a lecture tour in Guatemala City, Guatemala, delivering his and Gerda's message of hope. Click here to read his obituary.





RELATED LINKS

The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation This non-profit, public foundation promotes education which teaches tolerance and respect for others, and encourages community service focusing on ending hunger.

EXTRA INFORMATION

This story was edited by Stephanie Cole
Photos courtesy of The Klein Foundation, Carl Cox Photography, Jewish Virtual Library, The Holocaust History Project, Aish International, and Karen Simonetti.



Recommended Reading



One Survivor Remembers
1995 Academy Award Winner
Best Documentary Short Film

A production of Home Box Office and
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Distributed by: Direct Cinema Limited

All But My Life
A memoir by Gerda Weissmann Klein

The basis for the HBO Academy Award Winning Best Documentary Short Filme --

"One Survivor Remembers"

The Hours After
by Gerda Weissmann Klein and Kurt Klein

The love story of a Holocaust survivor and the German-born America soldier who liberated her - an intimate testament to love's profound and enduring power

Promise Of A New Spring -
the Holocaust and renewal

by Gerda Weissmann Klein

Recommended for readers ages 7 to 10


 
RECOMMENDED READING

All But My Life

by Gerda Weissman Klein

One Survivor Remembers

by Kary Antholis

Promise of A New Spring: The Holocaust and Renewal

by Gerda Weissmann Klein

The Hours After

by Gerda Weissmann Klein and Kurt Klein


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Last changed on:9/24/2009 1:24:48 PM