Monday, August 31, 2009

Life in a Jar - Irena Sendler

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Irena Sendler - a Polish social worker who helped save some 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis by smuggling them out of the Warsaw Ghetto and giving them false identities - has died. She was 98.

Sendler died at a Warsaw hospital on Monday morning, her daughter, Janina Zgrzembska, told The Associated Press. She had been hospitalized since last month with pneumonia. Sendler was serving as a social worker with the city's welfare department during World War II when she masterminded the risky rescue operations of Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto during Nazi Germany's brutal World War II occupation. Records show that Sendler's team of some 20 people saved nearly 2,500 children from the Warsaw Ghetto between October 1940 and April 1943, when the Nazis burned the ghetto, shooting the residents or sending them to death camps.

Under the pretext of inspecting the ghetto's sanitary conditions during a typhoid outbreak, Sendler and her assistants went inside in search of children who could be smuggled out and given a chance of survival by living as Catholics. Babies and small children were smuggled out in ambulances and in trams, sometimes wrapped up as packages. Teenagers escaped by joining teams of workers forced to labor outside the ghetto. They were placed in families, orphanages, hospitals or convents.In hopes of one day uniting the children with their families - most of whom perished in the Nazis' death camps - Sendler wrote the children's real names on slips of paper that she kept at home.

When German police came to arrest her in 1943, an assistant managed to hide the slips, which Sendler later buried in a jar under an apple tree in an associate's yard. Some 2,500 names were recorded. Anyone caught helping Jews in Nazi-occupied Poland risked being summarily shot, along with family members - a fate Sendler only barely escaped herself after the 1943 raid by the Gestapo.

The Nazis took her to the Pawiak prison, which few left alive. She was tortured and was left with permanent scarring on her body - but she refused to betray her team. Zegota, an underground organization helping Jews, for which she worked at the time, paid a bribe to German guards to free her from the prison. Under a different name, she continued her work.After World War II, Sendler worked as a social welfare official and director of vocational schools, continuing to assist some of the children she rescued.Sendler's daughter once told the AP that during her childhood, the family house "was always full of people asking for help, chiefly looking for their lost relatives."

In 1965, Sendler became one of the first so-called Righteous Gentiles honored by the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem for wartime heroics. Poland's communist leaders at that time would not allow her to travel to Israel; she collected the award in 1983. Despite the Yad Vashem honor, Sendler was largely forgotten in her homeland. Only in her final years, confined to a nursing home, did she finally become one of Poland's most respected figures, with President Lech Kaczynski and other politicians backing a campaign that put her name forward for the Nobel Peace Prize. That effort came after her name was brought to the world's attention in 2000 by a group of U.S. schoolgirls from Uniontown, Kan., who wrote a short play about her bravery based on historic records called "Life in a Jar." It went on to garner international attention, and has been performed more than 200 times in the United States, Canada and Poland.


Sunday, August 9, 2009

Oct 2008 - Meeting Seth at the SLC Airport

Welcome Back
Elder Thomas!

After holding the banner up, off and on again, for the first five minutes, we realized we didn't need to until we actually saw Seth coming.
(Wow, it's a good thing we figured that out, because were at least twenty minutes early.)

Grandma and Grace were excited to see Seth (and each other).


The babies and their buggies were posed and ready to cheer.



"I've got the balloon," says Sitani.


Is Seth here yet? We're kinda ready to party.


After realizing we'd be waiting a few more minutes, Haini provided some comic relief by disappearing only to reappear magically on the escalator - Yes, the same one we were all anxiously watching for Seth to come down on.

"Oh, look! It's Elder Suguturaga, just home from his mission to CA."

Haini, thanks for the funny.

He's here! Look how he's changed.
Oh, not too much - he still has a backpack of books.
Are you telling me he has a suitcase full of books too?

(By-the-way, if you'd like to borrow a book, they're mostly written in German.)


Seth and Jace met for the first time.


Hey, good looking. Have we met yet?
(Note to self: "I've got to get me an RM one day."
But, Daddy says, "Not anytime too soon.")

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

One Diploma After Another


It's 2009 and she's finished her internship. The last paper has been written. She even got her Mrs. degree in between all those classes, not to mention bring little Gweneviere into this world. Wow, you are a real go-getter. Three cheers for you - hip, hip, horray!