OTHER VIEWS Goering's Captor is ay 8 was the 60th anniversary of VE Day, marking surren- der of the Third Reich to the Allied Forces. May 7 was the 60th anniversary that my father and his men captured the most wanted man on the European continent — Hermann Goering, Hitler's field marshal. My father personally guarded Goering from May 7 to 9, 1945. Then, per Goering's request, my dad was one of Goering's guards at the Nuremberg Trials. We each have a gift to give the world and within that gift lies our destiny. Everything that happens is either meant to mold and shape our character or reveal our true purpose. My full maiden name is Barbara S. Shapiro. My father passed away April 4, 1968. I am his eld- Stephanie Mellen is a Troy resident. Her e-mail address is stefinellen@msn.corn. "thought it especially appropri- est child. The past month has ate that a Jew be involved in been one filled with deep reflec- this momentous occasion." tion and healing. Stack emphasized the impor- On May 7, 1945, upon learn- ing that the 36th Division of the tance of capturing Goering. Intelligence reports estimated 7th Army had moved into his that over a quarter of a million mountainside hideout at Castle armed German troops were Fischhorn at Zell am See, STEPHANIE active in the countryside. Austria, Goering sent one of his MELLEN Goering was to be the No. 1 personal aides, Col. Berndt von Community defendant at the Nazi war trials. Brauchistch, to Brig. Gen. On a snowy road in Austria, Perspective Robert I. Stack, assistant divi- 80 miles behind enemy lines, sion commander, and Major my dad, his driver and his two General John Dalquist, com- riflemen hoped to capture Goering, a manding the division. The aide signatory to the Final Solution. He was explained that Goering wished to sur- head of the German air force and after render to the Americans rather than Hilter's death, the leader of Nazi advancing Soviet troops. Germany. My father, 1st Lt. Jerome N. Shapiro, When this small platoon encountered commanded a platoon of the 636th Goering in his black Mercedes, a heavily Tank Destroyer-Reconnaissance armored staff car, there were 78 people Company attached to the 36th Texas with him. Goering calmly surrendered Division and 142nd Infantry his gun to my father. My dad in was in Intelligence & Reconnaissance. General charge of 30 soldiers detailed to guard Stack wrote in his memoirs that he College Zionism Paying Off Washington/JTA arents are frightened, defense organizations are sounding the alarm and community-based activists are in a state of near apoplexy over the alleged dominance of anti-Israel forces on American college campuses. In the past few years, however, there has been a quiet revolution in pro-Israel campus advocacy — supported by such mainstream organizations as the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Hillel and the Israel on Campus Coalition. Savvy pro-Israel stu- dents have made stunning inroads at colleges and universities across the coun- try, including those frequently pointed to as the most hostile to Israel. Some have come to believe that today's pro-Israel students are silent, apathetic and even fearful. From our experience, nothing could be further from the truth. This generation constitutes the most confident and competent community of pro-Israel student leaders America has ever seen. What accounts for this stag- gering discrepancy in perception? The problem may be an outmoded system of metrics ill-equipped to gauge inroads made by sophisticated advocates in a radically transformed campus environ- ment. ro JN 5/26 2005 30 Barry Silverman is chairman ofAIPAC's leadership development committee and a member of Hiders scholars council. Randall Kaplan is chairman of the board of directors of Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life and a member ofAIPAC's board of directors. Today's college students grew up in an era defined not by '60s-style street the- atrics, but by the entrepreneurial ethos of the start-up phenomenon. They spent their teenage years watching small, innovative firms undermine giant indus- try monopolies through a mastery of new technology, strategic use of resources and a devout commitment to quality and efficiency. College students are the leading pur- veyors of these new approaches. They have found faster, more economical ways of getting a job done. Consequently, college students' approach to problem-solving and goal attainment tends to be more stream- lined, agile and imaginative than that of their parents and grandparents. A Wise Approach Pro-Israel student activists are smart, focused and intensely results-oriented. They realize that "standing up" to Israel's detractors through zero-sum con- frontations on the quad is more likely to alienate potential allies than engage them, more effective at securing short- term publicity than long-term impact, and subsequently constitutes a poor use of time and talent. The sharpest pro-Israel activists prefer to identify key sources of power and influence that will determine the strength of the U.S.-Israel relationship for years to come, and then invest the bulk of their advocacy in influencing those strategic targets. It is also worth remembering that today's pro-Israel students reached polit- Goering and his retinue on May 7 until he was taken to higher division head- quarters. May 4 was the official opening of the newest exhibit at the Simon Wiesenthal Center Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles honoring the Allies of World War II: "Liberation! Revealing the Unspeakable." It will be going on a worldwide tour. Included is Goering's engraved, gold-plated Walther PPK in its original case, which he surrendered to my father on May 7, 1945. The exhibit also contains my father's 1911 Colt serv- ice revolver and his uniform. I remember opening the red case that held Goering's PPK for the first time . when I was 7. I saw it on the top shelf in a closet in my younger sister's bed- room next to something very shiny — the armband that Goering was wearing when he surrendered to my dad. I used to wear the heavily gold-braided arm- band as a little girl when I played Miss America. I used to sit on a rug in our to remove barriers to ical awareness in an studying abroad in era of transformational Israel. change: the second When Israel's detrac- Palestinian intifada, 9- tors indulge in simplis- 11 and the war in Iraq tic and distorted sloga- came at them fast and neering about the furiously. Acutely security barrier, pro- aware of the accelerat- Israel activists at the ing pace of history, BARRY RANDALL University of Colorado they bring to their S I LVERNIAN KAPLAN set up coffee dates activism the start-up Special Commentary with the editors of the principles of ingenuity campus newspaper for and effective impact. extended conversations about how the Savvy pro-Israel students approach barrier saves lives and facilitates peace. their advocacy by remembering that there are but 24 hours in a day and then asking themselves, "How can I employ Building Strong Ties my limited personal resources to achieve Pro-Israel students spend months — maximum political influence?" even years — cultivating personal rela- While Israel's detractors at the tionships with influential people, both University of California at Berkeley on campus and beyond. make fellow students late for class by They bring Jewish and non-Jewish erecting mock Israeli checkpoints on the campus leaders into the pro-Israel main campus drag, pro-Israel activists movement by inviting them to partici- recruit student government officials and pate in such national and international other ma i nstream campus leaders to gatherings as the AIPAC Policy sign petitions expressing support for the Conference - which next week will U.S.-Israel relationship. host more than 800 students from 250 When Israel's detractors disaffect the campuses in all 50 states, including politically moderate majority of students 100 student government presidents — by accusing the U.S. and Israeli govern- as well as the Hillel-AIPAC Advanced ments of "neo-colonialism" and "imperi- Advocacy Mission to Israel and the alist aggression," pro-Israel activists at Birthright Israel program. Rutgers University engage the College As a result of these relationships, pro- Democrats and College Republicans, Israel students are spectacularly posi- volunteer on political campaigns, organ- tioned for success if large-scale mobiliza- ize student-lobbying missions and build tion is determined to be a strategic enduring relationships with members of objective. Congress. When an anti-Israel divestment res- While Israel's detractors at the olution was presented to the University of Florida sponsor propagan- University of Michigan's student distic "Palestinian Awareness Weeks," assembly last year in Ann Arbor, pro- pro-Israel activists work with campus Israel students rallied hundreds of political leaders to compel the university