Holocaust Survivor Speaker Series Returns To UACCM
The
University of Arkansas Community College at Morrilton is honored to host Holocaust
survivor Susan Warsinger at the ninth annual Holocaust Survivor Series event on
March 7 at 6:30 p.m. in the college’s Fine Arts Auditorium. Warsinger will
speak beforehand at 10 a.m. in the Sacred Heart Catholic School gymnasium in
Morrilton before going into more detail about her experiences during her
nighttime lecture.
Susan Warsinger Credit: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum |
Warsinger
— born Susi Hilsenrath on May 27, 1929 — was the eldest of three children. Her
mother took care of the home while her father owned a thriving linen store in
Bad Kreuznach, a city is western Germany. By 1938, Warsinger and her brother,
Joseph, were smuggled into France after years of increasing violence and
discrimination toward local Jewish citizens. After France fell to the German
army nearly two years later, the two children were evacuated from Paris to the
Palace of Versailles, the former home of French ruler Louis XIV. The children
eventually made their way across Spain and Portugal before finally immigrating
to the U.S. in 1941 with the help of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. The
Hilsenrath family was reunited soon after, later settling in Washington, D.C.
“I
experienced some of this horror,” Warsinger said when asked why she volunteers
for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “I am compelled by my
conscience, and I am honored to join the education movement this museum
represents. While guiding our visitors through the permanent exhibit, I teach
them about the crimes against humanity that occurred in Europe between 1933 and
1945 … When we have finished our tour, our visitors understand that we all must
learn from our past errors, that we all must remember what happened and that we
all must ensure that such an inhuman assault as the Holocaust never recurs.”
Susan Warsinger Credit: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum |
Much
can be learned from those twelve terrifying years of world history, but as
years pass the public has fewer opportunities to hear from those who
experienced them. UACCM hosts a different Holocaust Survivor speaker every year
so that as many of these stories can be told, first-hand, to the central
Arkansas community.
Warsinger
will begin her lecture at 6:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Auditorium, with doors
opening 30 minutes prior. This event is free and open to the public.
For
more information, contact Special Events Coordinator Kristi Strain at (501)
977-2081, or at strain@uaccm.edu. If you have an accommodation need for
this event, please contact Counseling Services at (501) 977-2095.
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