Moved To Action Students at Methodist Albion College will dedicate a plaque in Poland next month identifying Schindler's factory. HARRY KIRS BAUM Staff Writer I Europe was struggling under — that Jews were Christ killers. "I proposed that we do a first-year seminar," Frick said. "Geoff Cocks asked if he could join me. We've '9. worked closely together on this." It's always been one of the first seminars to fill up, Frick said, but now, in its fifth year, it's required for all first-year students. Frick will retire after this year, and his successor will carry on with Professor Cocks. As an extension of the seminars, a five-day Holocaust symposium, "The Holocaust and Moral Responsibility," was held on campus at the end of March. After showing Holocaust films such as The Last Days and The Lodz Ghetto, profes- sors from around the state, Holocaust survivors and Jewish leaders spoke of the history and consequences of the Shoah to packed classrooms. t may seem strange that a Christian student from a small, mid- Michigan private school would spend the last two years dealing with governmental red-tape to place a plaque of recognition on one of the most famous small factories in Krakow. But to Zack Kleinsasser, 22, a senior at Albion College, the gesture makes perfect sense. While taking a walking tour of Krakow Zack Kleinsasser in 1999, Kleinsasser and 20 students and stiq faculty from Albion explored the city's Jewish ghetto and learned how most of the large population were deported to concen- tration camps, where many died. Their guide then walked them through another section of town, and pointed out a striking art deco building. It was Oskar Schindler's faaory, the same factory where 1,200 Jews were saved from death. The same factory made famous by the movie Schindler's List, which launched a renewed interest in Why Albion? Holocaust studies and commemoration. "We got on the bus and I remember Albion College, founded in 1835, thinking how odd it was that there wasn't has a Methodist affiliation. Nestled Prof. Fra nk Frick anything at all to signify what it was," about 20 miles from Jackson and Kleinsasser said. "Here's something that Battle Creek, the small liberal arts the entire western world, at least America, knows school thrives with more than 1,500 students. about, and there's nothing to commemorate it. It may seem surprising to see this level of interest That's when I thought there should be a plaque." in the Holocaust from a small Christian college. Now Kleinsasser has turned his well-intentioned "This is what we see all over the country," said thought into reality. He and 15 other students from Michael Berenbaum, former director of the Research Albion will go to Poland on May 12 to dedicate the Institute of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum plaque, written in English, Polish and Hebrew. Many Albion students, faculty and staff have con- tributed to the cost of producing the plaque for the Schindler factory, and the eight-day trip has been financed with the help of grants. Kleinsasser couldn't have done it without the help of two Albion professors already dedicated to remembering the Holocaust. Geoffrey Cocks, European history professor, and Frank Frick, religion professor, are responsible for Albion's annual Holocaust commemoration program. Both educators are Christian. Frick is an ordained minister whose specialty is the Hebrew Bible. Cocks is an international Nazi scholar, who wrote several books about psychotherapy in the Third Reich. Frick said he spent his career fighting the notion that when Christianity came along, Judaism became a museum piece, "and backing off the absolutist claims that created the kinds of problems that - in Washington D.C., who spoke at Albion's March symposium. "The Jewish community doesn't see the full extent of the power of this event [the Shoah] to transform and transmit." Kleinsasser, a history major from. Cottage Grove, Minn., said he's always been interested in the past. His father, Keith, is a high school history teacher, and Zack recalls that every family vacation has been a history trip. The family visited the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum during a trip to Washington, D.C. in 1993. "That really struck me," Kleinsasser said. As a freshman in 1998, he enrolled in Albion's Holocaust seminar, and the hook was set. "There's so many issues that relate to the Holocaust, not just history, but politics, religion, philosophy," he said. By the time he went on the 1999 trip to Germany, Poland and Israel, he already had an interest in the Righteous Gentiles, those non-Jews who took chances to save Jewish lives. That led to a just-com- pleted honors thesis on Holocaust rescuers. He trav- eled to Europe last year, where he interviewed a number of rescuers — with names provided by Yad . Vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial. Frick taught an American Jewish Life and Thought course two years ago in the fall. "I was told that I had a third of the Jewish student population on the campus in my course — I had three Jewish students in the course — so when you get 16 students to go on this trip, I think it's pretty remarkable." None are Jewish students. The plaque cost $3,000, and most of the money has been raised by contributions from Albion stu- dents and faculty, Cocks said. Funding for the trip has come from the partici- pants, from various state, local and school grants (such as the Gerald R. Ford Institute for Public Service and Policy) and from individual contribu- tions from friends of the college who read about it in local newspapers, Cocks said. The students also will help restore a Jewish ceme- tery in Breslaw, dedicate the plaque, tour Krakow, then visit Auschwitz/Birkenau. Kleinsasser calls this "a really neat connection between America and Europe, and it can demon- strate today that non-Jewish Americans can get involved." ❑ Mt ll 111: (sity 11111, ICI[ COI t u v 1121 Dit isOlv 10n: Oskar Schindler's factory today in Krakow, Poland. 4/20 2001