Thanks for the background.
Posting this comment from the blog for others to read for background:
Never Heard Of Irena?
Maddie 14 May 2008 02:57
Isn’t it amazing that millions of us ‘ignorant Yanks’ know about this incredible woman and her story, yet a Euro doesn’t.
It started with a history project in a small rural Kansas town where 4 friends signed up for National History Day, a contest in which more than half a million students compete to create the most compelling historical project. They decided to make their project a one act play about the Holocaust. This is a small farming town and there were only 29 kids in their graduating class.
They wanted an actual person to research and came across an article from years earlier titled “The Other Schindlers” which described a half dozen people who had also saved Jews but were never recognized. They chose Irena, but after sifting through books, newspapers, the internet and even going to the Midwest Center for Holocaust Education, could find nothing. Through a Jewish Foundation, they found out Irena was still alive and living in Warsaw.
They sent her a letter and told her about their play. Irena responded, in Polish, and they had to find a translator at the University of Kansas.
“To my dear and beloved girls, very close to my heart,” Irena began, and proceeded to tell them her incredible and harrowing story. She was flattered by their play but insisted she was no hero and did what anyone would have done.
They made it to the National History Day finals but didn’t win, but because of coverage in a local paper, civic organizations were calling and asking them to perform their play “Life in a Jar”. After a performance, a Jewish businessman asked if they would like to go to Warsaw and meet Irena and said he would pay. They went in 2001 and were mobbed by the Polish press because it became news there. They met Irena and they all hugged and cried.
All these years later, this woman became a hero and inspiration to these young girls living in rural Kansas.
I don’t know if this story is what brought Irena the recognition she deserved and a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize, but it’s been published here in several venues and when Gore won, I thought it was a complete injustice.
Thank you, Very nice info! :-)
http://www.kshs.org/teachers/historyday/uniontown.htm
“Holocaust and Life in a Jar”
Five young women—Gabrielle Bradbury, Elizabeth Cambers, Sabrina Coons, Megan Stewart, and Janice Underwood of Uniontown High School, Uniontown, Kansas, made an incredible discovery in their History Day class during the 2000-2001 year. This discovery would change their lives and that of a very special woman.
They discovered a magazine clipping with the headline, “Irena Sendler saved 2,500 children from the Warsaw Ghetto in 1942-43.” Their teacher, Milken educator Norman Conard, wondered if there was some mistake. He was unfamiliar with this woman's story. Conard, whose classroom motto is “he who changes one person, changes the world entire,” encouraged the girls to pursue the topic searching for primary and secondary sources.
The students learned that Irena Sendler had been a non-Jewish social worker and was head of the children's section in the Polish underground movement known as Zegot during World War II. As a social worker, Sendler had access to the Warsaw Ghetto. Sendler risked her life to save the lives of thousands of Jewish children by coaxing Jewish parents and grandparents to relinquish their children to her. She knew that the Jewish children would, most likely, die in the Ghetto or in the death camps. She established a plan to smuggle the children past Nazi guards by putting them in body bags, saying they were dead or had typhus. Once outside the Ghetto, she found Polish families to adopt them.
Between 1942 and 1943, Sendler was able to rescue 2,500 children. She saved a list of the children's real names, stored them in jars for safe keeping, and buried the jars in her garden. She knew one day she would be able to dig up the jars and identify the children.
On October 20, 1943, Sendler was captured by the Nazi's and beaten severely. The Polish underground eventually was able to bribe a guard for her release, and she went into hiding.
The Uniontown students searched for the final resting place of Irena and discovered she was still alive at the age of 91 and living in poverty in Warsaw, Poland. They began to collect money for Irena calling their collection jar, “Life in a Jar.” They contacted some of the people Irena had saved.
For their History Day project, the students wrote a performance in which they portrayed the life of Irena Sendler. “Holocaust and Life in a Jar” received first place in the Senior Group Performance at the 2000 Kansas History Day competition in May 2000 and earned them a trip that June to National History Day near Washington, D.C. The students also performed the drama for numerous clubs and civic groups in the community. People were so inspired by the project that they sponsored an “Irena Sendler Day.”
The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous in New York City offered assistance in sending the money the students had raised to a Polish bank in Warsaw for Irena. The students corresponded with Irena enlisted the help of a Polish student, who was attending a local college, to translate for them. “Your performance and work is continuing the effort I started over fifty years ago, you are my dearly beloved girls,” wrote Irena. The students shared the letters with universities, historical societies, and the Chicago and New York Jewish Foundations.
C-SPAN, National Public Radio, and CBS, became interested in the story. Conard was contacted for the book and film rights to their story. The students were invited to perform in Washington, D.C. and before a Jewish foundation in New York City. They have become knowledgeable on subjects such as the Holocaust, World War II, and the Polish underground.
In January 2001, they met John Shuchart, a Jewish educator and businessman, who told the girls he would raise the money and send them to Warsaw. He raised the money within 24 hours. The group traveled to Poland in May 2001 for an emotional meeting with the 91-year-old woman and heroine to the students. Sendler told the students she was just an ordinary person, not a hero. “I want the Jewish community to know that there was resistance and a spirit among the Jews in the Ghetto.”
The students continue their performances and research and correspond with Sendler and those she rescued. They have established an e-mail address isendler@hotmail.com. Three other students have joined the group to provide assistance.
“The story of Irena Sendler had a profound effect not only on those who have heard the story, but on the storytellers as well,” said Conard. “The girls regularly write on their homework papers notes such as, ‘I'm changing the world’ and ‘Irena's story must be told.’ I've traveled with the girls to numerous performances and watched the great emotion that pours out of the audience during their presentation. They have literally taken our class motto and brought it to life.”