5007 Providence Road Charlotte, NC 28226 Change Service Requested PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT# 1208 CHARLOTTE, NC The Charlotte JEWISH Vol. 29, No. 5 An Affiliate of the Jewis i Federation of Greater Charlotte ‘*God May Be Unjust and Unfair... But God Is Not h^fferent” Elie Wiesel Comes to Charlotte to Commembrhte ECHO Foundation’s Award Against Indifference ECHO Foundation Celebrates A Decade Inspired by Elie Wiesel By Amy Krakovitz What suprises you is that this giant is really a very small man. Not more than 5’4”, his skin ruddy and sun-touched, his shock of white hair unkempt and wind blown, he belies his largesse. What doesn’t surprise you is that almost everything he says is quotable, a proverb, a motto to live by. And live by it, he does. He is not a phony, a charlatan, a scam artist. He is truly everything repre sented by his reputation and more. He is Elie Wiesel, author, activist, Nobel Peace Prize recipi ent, scholar, teacher, and Jew. And several of us in Charlotte were fortunate enough to spend most of two days in his presence. Wiesel arrived in Charlotte at the behest of the Echo Foundation, an organization founded with his help and encouragement. Ten years ago, Wiesel spoke here and on his trip back to airport after that visit, he spoke to Stephanie Ansaldo, then on the staff of Charlotte Latin School, the spon soring organization for his initial visit. It can’t end here, he told her, you have to continue to bring Foundation began awarding activists in Charlotte with the Award Against Indifference. This year’s recipient was Sally Dalton Robinson. Additionally, the Echo Foundation awards the Young Heroes of Hope Award to emerging humanitari an leaders. This year’s recipient was Benjamin Smolen, a gradu ate of Myers Park High School, and currently a senior at Princeton University. Inspired by the Echo Foundation’s 2003 program with Earth Institute Director Jeffrey Sachs, Benjamin creat^ed S.T.A.N.D. (Student Tolerance and Non- Discrimination), a coalition of social and environmental issues groups. At Princeton, Benjamin organized a benefit concert for the victims of Hurrican Katrina. Benjamin’s grandmother is a member of Temple Beth El. Teach Your Children A great deal of Wiesel’s short time in Charlotte was spent among students: high school, college and elementary school. He believes strongly that education is the key to changing the world. lyar-Sivan 5767 May 2007 Benjamin Smolen (center), recipient of the Young Heroes of Hope Award, with his aunt, Sally Gehl, who travleed from Cleveland, and his mother, Wendy Smolen. Photo by Bobby Cochran courtesy ECHO Foundation. about change in Charlotte, to elim inate indifference in this commu nity. Charlotte was unique ampng communities he had visited in the past, he said, we appeared to have the capacity to make major changes in our community and the world. And so the Echo Foundation was bom, a monumental effort of both Ansaldo and Wiesel. Beginning in 2000, the Echo The morning of March 27 saw him conducting an extensive ques tion and answer period with more than 1,000 high school students in the auditorium at Myers Park High School. The atmosphere in the auditorium before he spoke was surprisingly calm and orderly. Dressed in their best for this spe cial occasion, the students expressed a combination of quiet anticipation and tense expectation. Henry Hirschmann with Elie Wiesel at the Patron’s Reception. Photo by Bobby Cochran courtesy ECHO Foundation. “It will be a great experience to be with someone outstanding like him,” said Shayna Bernstein, a sophomore from East Mecklenburg High School, before the program began. “I want my peers to grasp what happened [during the Holocaust] and help it to never happen again.” That seemed to be the general attitude among the Jewish stu dents in the auditorium. Their focus on what they wanted to hear from Wiesel was mostly directed toward his Holocaust experience. But as we learned when he finally took the stage, he is so much more than a Holocaust sur vivor. He was introduced by Rabbi Judith Schindler of Temple Beth El, who received a warm hug upon Wiesel’s stage entrance. He was a dear friend of her father’s, he said, he so admired Alexander Schindler. After a brief greeting, he immediately began taking questions from the high school students. The questions were thoughtful, polite, and intelligent. The responses were sincere and pro found. When asked what has touched his heart the most, Wiesel replied, “Seeing children oppressed by poverty, starvation and pain.” What can we do to keep the Holocaust memory alive for new and future generations? “I am not worried that it will be forgotten. I am worried that it will be trivial ized, cheapened and commercial ized.” Asked about his support of Israel and Zionism: “I am for Israel. I am very sad for ' all the missed opportuni ties by the Palestinians.” Confronted by so many places and people all over the world needing help from poverty, injustice, and death, one student asked how to decide on what to focus their efforts. “Choose one ... today my focus is Darfur.” Whose responsibility is it to take care of global issues? “All of us!” When asked whether he still resented Germans: “I don’t believe in collec tive guilt. The children of the killers are not the killers of children.” The question and answer period went on for over an hour. The event concluded with a presentation of gifts from students in the area. One gift was 1,000 books to be presented to Beit Russia are being suppressed, groups disbanded and arrested ...” Against Indifference Lecture The evening at Founder’s Hall began with a Middle East style buffet and a roomful of people, both elated and excited in antici pation of Elie Wiesel’s upcoming speech. The Lead Program Sponsor was The Leon Levine Foundation: Sandra and Leon Levine. Sandra and Leon were on hand to accept the thanks of The Echo Foundation’s chair, Mark Erwin. It was during this time that Sally Dalton Robinson was awarded the 2007 Echo Foundation Award Against Indifference. The program in the Belk Theater began with a musical per formance by the Charlotte Children’s Choir joined by the children from Temple Israel. They performed an arrangement of Ani Ma'Amin and “An Inscription of Hope.” The introduction to the With the students of the Charlotte Jewish Day School. Photo by Jejf Cravotta courtesy ECHO Foundation. Tziporah, a school for Ethiopian immigrants in Israel that was named for Wiesel’s sister who per ished in the Holocaust. The session with the students was followed by a brief meeting with members of the media. At this event, this reporter was able to ask questions that came from our Hebrew High students. Kenny Gould, a sophomore at Providence Day, asked if there were any aspects of the world that Professor Wiesel still had a negative view of When I asked him this ques tion, Wiesel responded almost softly, yet his voice was intense. “Of course,” he said. “Darfur. Russia. Organized protests in “Inscription of Hope” was made by Sarah Robins of Temple Beth El, whose brother Harold had been one of the twelve students who followed “In the Footsteps of Elie Wiesel” during his visit here in Charlotte. Wiesel began his presentation with a discussion from the Book of Job. “God can be unfair and unjust. ... But God is not indiffer ent. ...” He illustrated the indifference in human beings with a story of his return to Auschwitz. He met with a priest who lived in a house in the town. In Wiesel’s memory, the camp was isolated, far from (Continued on page 6)