When Vera Gara told students at Cairine Wilson Secondary School it was important to help the Syrian refugees now on their way to Canada, her words carried more weight than any politician鈥檚.
Gara, 82, knows what it鈥檚 like to flee her home, to lose everything, to face death and then rebuild a new life. An Austrian Jew, as a girl Gara spent a year in the Nazi concentration camps of Bergen-Belsen in Germany and Theresienstadt, north of Prague. Her father was beaten by a Nazi sympathizer and died of his injuries in 1945. The family business 鈥 Pick Salami 鈥 was stolen from them.
鈥淚 have to tell you that I鈥檓 very much for the Syrian refugees,鈥 she told students. 鈥淚 only wish it had been the same in 1938.鈥
It was in 1938 that many western countries, Canada included, turned away the MS St. Louis, a passenger liner carrying nearly 1,000 Jews and other refugees from Europe fleeing Nazi persecution. Most of the passengers ended up back in Europe where hundreds would die in death camps.
鈥淲hen people are suffering we have to help them,鈥 she said.
Gara and two other Holocaust survivors 鈥 Tibor Egervari and Elly Bollegraaf 鈥 and three children of survivors 鈥 Rubin Friedman, Marion Silver and Mina Cohn 鈥 visited the school Wednesday on the third day of Hanukkah to give students a chance to hear about history from those who had lived through it. The program was offered through the Centre for Holocaust Education and Scholarship at 杏吧原创 University.

Ayman Ahmed, centre, and other students listen as Holocaust survivor Vera Gara shares her story at Cairine Wilson Secondary School in Orl茅ans
Gara cited presidential hopeful Donald Trump鈥檚 call for a ban on Muslims entering the United States as a warning of the dangers that still exist.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have to love each other, but we do have to tolerate each other,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow we have this person in the United States 鈥 Mr. Trump 鈥 who is saying the same things. The hatred is still there.
The message came through loud and clear for Ayman Ahmed, a Grade 11 religious studies student.
鈥淗istory is repeating itself,鈥 Ahmed said. 鈥淚f she鈥檚 saying that 鈥 and she鈥檚 lived through it 鈥 then how can you deny it?鈥
Tibor Egervari was just a child in Hungary during the war and the family had lived more or less a normal life until March 1944, when the Nazis turned their attention to Hungarian Jews. Egervari was hidden by a Protestant family and survived the war. His father and brother did not.
Asked one student: What is the most important lesson we can learn from the Holocaust?
鈥淚 would tell you to be very, very careful,鈥 Egervari said. 鈥淚鈥檇 tell you not to believe in any rhetoric that tries to identify people by what they are. What matters in life is not what you are, it鈥檚 what you do.
鈥淏e careful of anything that can lead to dictatorship 鈥 people who say they know the truth. Think for your yourself. Learn things for yourself. Then make your own decision.鈥
For teacher Kerra Wadley, who teaches history and food science (her class put together a kosher lunch for guests), the day was a rare chance for students to experience history firsthand.
鈥淭he next generation of kids won鈥檛 have this experience,鈥 Wadley said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be up to this generation to tell the stories. They understand how important it is to get it right.鈥
Source:
By: Blair Crawford