metro A Mo ► tr In uolano U-M Dearborn students offered unique trip to learn about the Holocaust. Judy Greenwald I Special to the Jewish News nlightenment through educa- tion is key to making the world a better place. It is this ideal that has propelled the University of Michigan- Dearborn (UMD) to offer a month-long undergraduate study trip to Poland, where students will explore Polish history and learn about one of the darkest periods in human history. UMD history department faculty mem- bers Dr. Jamie Wraight and Dr. Anna Muller developed the program, which began May 27 and runs through June 24. Twelve UMD students from across Metro Detroit are participating in the program. "I developed this overseas program in conjunction with Anna Muller, assistant professor of Eastern European history:' Wraight said. Wraight of Ypsilanti has been with UMD for 15 years. He was originally hired as the curator of the Voice/Vision Holocaust Survivor Oral History Archive in 2000, working under the late Sidney Bolkosky, creator of the archive. Wraight now directs the archive, and teaches courses on the Holocaust and modern and ancient history. "I traveled to Poland with other Holocaust scholars and remembered the impact of those trips:' he said. "I realized how transformative such an opportunity would be for students enrolled in our Polish history and Holocaust courses:' Muller of Dearborn, who was born and raised in Gdansk, Poland, said traveling to her home country with a group of students from the University of Florida in 2011 helped lead her to create this unique study opportunity. "I think this trip will give students a chance to learn about the rich and mul- tilayered Polish history, and to reflect on how societies remember and how they deal with a difficult past:' she said. "I'm very proud of how Poland is changing, especial- ly how it's dealing with its turbulent history — facets to be proud of, but also those of difficulty, such as anti-Semitism:' The trip will begin in Krakow and continue to Zakopane, Lodz, Warsaw and Gdansk. While overseas, the group will explore various and oftentimes conflicting aspects of Polish and Polish-Jewish history. Visits to historic sites, including essential locations such as Auschwitz and Belzec, will be accompanied by appropriate source readings and documents. Wraight and Muller also designed a E 14 June 11 • 2015 Dr. Jamie Wraight, Dr. Anna Muller and Dr. Martin Hershock companion course, "Memory and Oblivion: Polish and Polish-Jewish History in the Polish Modern Landscape that students can take for credit during the overseas experience. "Students will be expected to partici- pate in 10 scheduled seminars as well as numerous lectures and workshops with local historians:' Wraight said. "We'll also have the opportunity to experience Polish culture: using local transportation, staying in hostels and hotels, and dining in local eateries:' Students will also visit the Museum of Polish Jewry and the European Center of Solidarity. Along with Wraight and Muller, Dr. Martin Hershock, dean of UMD's College of Arts, Sciences and Letters and profes- sor of history, is accompanying the group. Hershock, a Canton resident, is of Polish heritage and explained his personal interest in the trip. "The Holocaust is one of the most pro- foundly evil chapters in the world's history:' he said. "I think it's incumbent upon us to teach about the Holocaust to ensure the memory of this horror never disappears. The college has focused attention on the issue of genocide and Holocaust history. "Beyond the work done by Dr. Bolkosky and Dr. Wraight through the archive and classes, the college is home to the Armenian Research Center, one of the largest repositories of materials about the Armenian genocide. These strengths position the college well to advance under- standing of genocide and Holocaust stud- ies:" Lori and Steve Weisberg of West Bloomfield generously supported students on the trip. Importance Of Remembering Students are able to participate in this trip in part through generous donations from people throughout Metro Detroit, including Steve and Lori Weisberg of West Bloomfield. Both of their families have Polish Holocaust connections, and Lori explained their strong feelings about the need for this type of education. "Steve's mother is a survivor who was born in Warsaw:' she said. "Her parents and brothers were killed in the camps, and one sister survived with her. My father was also born in Poland. His parents, his eight broth- ers and one sister were murdered during the Holocaust as well. "We recognize there are students at U-M Dearborn who wouldn't be able to study in Europe without scholarship funds. This is meaningful to us because education is the foundation for the future. If people don't have knowledge and understanding of what occurred during that period, there is too great a risk the same thing can happen again:' The importance of Santayanis well-known phrase "Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it" is appar- ent to the students who are participating in the trip. Three members of the group, Tayloranne Lenze, Josh Scarbrough and Katrina Stack, all expressed their excitement about being able to travel and study overseas. "Learning about the Holocaust is very important because it had such an impact on Europe and the world' said Lenze, 21, an English major from Livonia. "Through Professor Muller, I've fallen in love with the idea of Poland and want to experience it myself. I'm excited to learn more about the Holocaust but honestly am afraid to go to the concentration camps and afraid of what new horrors I'll learn. But I think this trip will force me to confront what happened more than I would in the safety of a classroom:' Like Lenze, history major Scarbrough, 20, of Southgate has been overseas before, but is also excited and grateful to be taking part in this program. "Holocaust education has meant a lot to me over the years:' he said. "Seeing the actual locations where these crimes against the Jews were committed will make this experience incredibly overwhelming:' This will be 20-year-old Garden City resi- dent Stack's first time studying abroad, and the history major who wishes to become a teacher also has roots in Poland and was eagerly anticipating the opportunity to visit her family's country. "I'm so excited about this program:' she said, "and I feel learning about the Holocaust is something I have to do. The stories of the Jews and other victims contain lessons important to me not only as a histo- rian, but also a person: lessons of strength and hope. I know this will be a once-in-a- lifetime experience and will shape how I'll teach about the Holocaust someday:' Wraight stressed the importance of Holocaust education at UMD, or indeed, any university. "What happened during the Holocaust continues to happen all over the world. Cambodia, Rwanda, Sudan: All have shown that genocidal behavior didn't end with the Holocaust," he said. "Education, and the awareness that comes with it, is vital to pre- vention:' ❑