Candles Burned in Chicago
A History of 53 Memorial Commemorations of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
by
Book Details
About the Book
This book tells the amazing story of 54 years of effort by a group of Jewish Chicagoans to commemorate the murder of 350,000 Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto.
In 1944, when these Chicagoans learned of the murder and of the heroic resistance by the last Warsaw Ghetto residents, they determined that the events must be made known to all
From 1944 to 1996, this group of Jewish Chicagoans and their friends mounted stirring national meetings, candlelight commemorations, dramatic presentations, and gifted discussions so that the heroism of the Warsaw Ghetto fighters and the tragedy of the victims might never be forgotten.
This book tells the story of the annual meetings and their organization. The reader can only be deeply impressed that the thrust of these was not merely to rehearse the past lest it be forgotten, but also to look to the future. For 54 years, speakers at the Commemorations stressed the need for present and future action to build a society in which a Warsaw Ghetto slaughter could not take place.
The major Commemoration, year after year required cooperation and organization, which were not always easy to achieve. Since the effort was open to everyone to support and participate, it attracted also its share of radicals and dissenters. If such individuals were also among the residents of the Warsaw Ghetto, why not in
The Jewish Chicagoans who carried forward the Commemoration, effort had, in themselves, all the elements of heroism and tragedy of the Warsaw Ghetto. So, year after year, they resolutely continued their effort and achieved effectiveness and prestige for what they were doing.
In part their effort was sustained by a pride in the bravery and resistance of the last units in the Ghetto.
The reader of this book will note the continuing emphasis on youth. It was not enough that contemporaries of the
At the end of the 54 years, the story became well known. Although it is still necessary to retell the story, remind the world what happened, and impress the need to prevent a repetition, a specific Commemoration, meeting in
About the Author
Kenan Heise who edited this book, is a retired journalist, a prolific author and a person deeply committed to human and civil rights. Whenever he wrote an obit for the Chicago Tribune about a Holocaust survivor, he deliberately included the names of any of their immediate family members
who had perished in the Shoah, making it their obituaries also.
N.Sue Weiler contributed the preliminary research on this book.