Friday, April 28, 2017

ToP STORY >> Never Forget: Holocaust survivors honored at Team Little Rock event

By Airman 1st Class Codie Collins
19th Airlift Wing Public Affairs

A candlelight vigil held April 25 honored those who persevered during the Holocaust. 

Three guest speakers shared their stories to enlighten Team Little Rock about the history of those times. 

Among the three guest speakers was Zwia Weiss, a Hungarian Jew and Holocaust survivor, who recounted her escape as a young girl from the Nazi regime.

“I moved from place to place to escape,” Weiss said. “I spoke such perfect German at a young age that the Nazis never assumed I was Jewish. It saved me many times.”

Weiss fought for her freedom from her war-torn homeland of Hungary to the United States. Every step of her journey, she fought for survival and a new life. At one point, she had to be smuggled through the Alps into Italy where she would eventually gain access to a ship bound for America – holding false Christian papers. 

“America was the Promised Land,” Weiss said. “I was very young and I (knew I) had to get to America.” 

The Statue of Liberty beckons people with the words inscribed on the tablet she holds: Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. These words rang true for Weiss and many other survivors who eventually sought safe haven in the United States.

It was that struggle for life and freedom that service members and civilians honored during the event. At its conclusion, candles were lit in honor of the approximately 11 million Jews, gypsies, homosexuals, physically and mentally disabled, Jehovah’s witnesses, Poles and Slavic victims of the Holocaust. 

“Taking a moment of silence to reflect while everyone in the room is holding a candle is a great way to show that we are all united about a common cause,” said U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Sarah Hubert, 19th Airlift Wing chaplain assistant. “The true significance (of the) candles is when you are surrounded by darkness, the light of a glowing candle helps one reflect. It can also symbolize a new beginning for some, and remembrance for others.”

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