SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS | « PREV 1 2 3 4 5 NEXT » [1 to 10 of 41] |
Name: The Cary's December 31, 2012 09:35 PM | Location: Michigan Message: Our children twins (10) and son (8) have taken to a year long study of WWII and have asked to visit the museum in Washington D.C. we are blessed to have children who not only want to learn about the past, but also desire to change to future for the better. Our heart aches for the tradegies of those lost. May God bess you. |
Name: anthony cabrera November 13, 2012 11:10 AM | Location: miami Message: thank you veterans for fighting for our country. may god bless you with all his heart and may you veterens get well and stay safe |
Name: john November 13, 2012 10:53 AM | Location:
Message: Thank you for serving our country, we deeply appreciate all that you have done .
Thank you
-John |
Name: Jen Kobleur May 06, 2012 02:49 AM | Location: Clarkston GA USA Message: As I write this, my father is struggling to breathe in the ICU. He was born in 1933, the youngest of 9 children...he and his brothers were all in military service, several in WW2. One was in Germany during the liberation of concentration camps. Dad has been my greatest history teacher! He taught me so much about war, atrocities and horrors of the holocaust, madmen who made up nazi regime...Now that his life is coming to an end, I realize that it truly is this generation's duty to mankind to educate our children and teach them the importance of stopping war and war crimes, hate crimes, anti-semitism, judgemental thinking and bullying especially against peoples' race and faith. Lighting candles for remembrance, offering up prayers for those lives lost in the holocaust. |
Name: Satri Pencak April 24, 2012 03:29 PM | Location: California Message: There is a new book out by my sister, Terese Pencak Schwartz, titled "Holocaust Forgotten - Five Million Non-Jewish Victims", that needs to be shared to remember "the others", which includes members of my family. |
Name: Terry G. Warman April 23, 2012 01:02 PM | Location: U.S.A Message: Yes we need to remember. My Dad was there in WW II.Why do we do what we do to one another? .......It is so senseless! Someday We shall be redeemed. All the tears dried,and no more pain,suffering,and sorrow! What a day that will be when we are all forevermore gathered together by the one that So Loved Us All That He Gave Himself....So we might Live.....Love Conquers All.!! Trust in Him "NOW" while there is still time...Time is Short..Thank You Jesus Christ! |
Name: Joyce Oxfeld April 23, 2012 11:12 AM | Location: Philadelphia, PA 19136 Message: My Father was a WW II Veteran and a witness to the liberation of one camps. He saw it all in person and never fully recovered. We are Jewish. He was fighting in the Battle of the Bulge and barely survived. He had a command of languages that came naturally to him. He could speak any dialect of German perfectly. He also had wavy blond hair, fair skin and blue eyes. His superior officers choose him, after what he witnessed to interrogate SS prisoners. They thought he was an Aryan. Dad kept his cool and asked standard questions in German until the end when he added"Ich bin Jude". Then the SS pow fell to his knees shaking and saying, " Alle ist Kaput, HItler ist no gut,". Dad never tired of telling me that story , but couldn't repeat it in public. |
Name: Sarah Beth Goncarova and Yary Hluchan April 20, 2012 01:58 PM | Location: New Haven,CT Message: In honor of the Day of Remembrance, we are recording survivor Sonia Korn-Grimani reading her memoir Sonia's Song. Sonia is 81 years old, and she grew up in Germany in the 1930s, declared an enemy of the state at eight years old, and given the choice to either leave Germany (without any resources) or be deported. She and her brother walked all night to escape, only to be forced, as Belgium fell under the control of the Nazis, to hide and flee again. She lived under assumed identities, witnessing the Battle of Belgium firsthand, lived as a rootless refugee before being placed in an orphanage in occupied Belgium, and hid from Nazi soldiers in plain sight. Sonia's is a remarkable story, beautifully written, and we are proud to be sharing it with the world. http://claygrouse.com/sonias_song/ |
Name: alina April 20, 2012 01:12 PM | Location: richmond, Va Message: its important to remember the stories of the childen from the holocsaust because these children lost their life at a young age, everyone should remember the holocsaust because we need to give respect to all the children,men,women, who passed away during that time. |
Name: Misa Contreras April 20, 2012 01:05 PM | Location:
Message: It's good to remember the stories of the children in the Holocaust because it's very sad what has happened to them and they should be remembered for the horrible things that has happened to them that no one diserved.I read about Stella Klingerova and her story was terrible, she died at age 14 in the gas chamber closet. No one should ever be treated like that no matter what race they are. |
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS | « PREV 1 2 3 4 5 NEXT » [1 to 10 of 41] |