Holocaust Remembrance Week to Include Talk by Concentration Camp
Survivor
Date: 04/19/07
Contact: Marc Lebovitz
Szlamek “Sammy” Rzeznik was only 4 years old when the Nazis invaded
Poland in September 1939. Both his parents and five siblings ended up being
killed in the Treblinka death camp and Sammy spent four years in
concentration camps in Demblin and Czestochowa.
He and his sister Sara were among only 20 children in Demblin and five in
Czestochowa and were protected from death only by their older sister, Rosa.
Post-war, Rosa and her husband, living in Vienna, decided that Sammy and
Sara should be adopted in the United States. A couple in the Chicago suburbs
adopted Sammy, who became Sammy Harris.
Holocaust child survivor Sam Harris will speak on his experiences at 7 p.m.
Thursday, May 3, in Schroeder 130 as part of Holocaust Remembrance Week at
Illinois State University.
Admission is free and open to the public, sponsored by ISU Hillel -
Jewish Student Union.
Harris, who splits his residences between Arizona and the Chicago suburbs,
is president of the Holocaust Memorial Foundation of Illinois. He is the
author of the book, “Sammy: Child Survivor of the Holocaust,” and continues
to speak extensively on the local and state level about his experiences and
lessons of the Holocaust. He wrote the book in order to help keep alive the
memory of what happened to European Jews during the Holocaust, especially in
the face of revisionists who claim the Holocaust never happened or that
stories about it are simply propaganda.
When he was adopted, Harris pushed his memories out of his mind, never
talking about his experiences. He graduated from college and became a
successful businessman. But with the support and encouragement of his wife,
Harris allowed his memories to return and eventually visited Europe,
including Germany, with his wife and two children.
These days, he spends his time writing and speaking to interested groups and
schools about his wartime experiences.
Other activities planned as part of Holocaust Remembrance Week are the
annual 24-hour reading on the Quad of 300,000 concentration camp victims’
names throughout Monday, April 30, beginning at midnight Sunday; from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday on the Schroeder Plaza, students will pass out
stickers in memory of the Holocaust and will be collecting 1.5 million
pennies symbolizing the 1.5 million Jewish children who were killed in
camps; showing the documentary “Partisans of Vilna” at 7 p.m. Wednesday in
Capen Auditorium, about Jewish resistance groups during WWII; Harris’ speech
at 7 p.m. Thursday; and Shabbat (Sabbath) services at 6 p.m. Friday at the
Campus Religious Center, 210 W. Mulberry in Normal, followed by dinner and a
discussion about the Holocaust.