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Life in A Jar- The Irene Sendler Story
The following article
is written by the Milken Family Foundation (www.mff.org) and is
reprinted with the Foundations permission
The four girls from Kansas who discovered Irena's story (Photo by
Karen Conard)
Four of Milken Educator Norm Conard's (KS '92) students discovered
an unsung heroine of the Holocaust and spread her story around the
world.
In 1942, as Jews throughout Europe were being rounded up and transported
en masse to Nazi concentration camps to face an unthinkable fate,
one woman took courageous action and risked her own life to save
thousands of others.
Her name was Irena Sendler. Though she herself was not Jewish, she
feared for the lives of Jews around her, particularly the children.
As head of the children's section in the Polish underground movement
known as Zegota, she was unable to sit by and not do anything. So
she went into the Warsaw Ghetto and persuaded Jewish parents and
grandparents to place their children in her care, saying that they
were certain to die in the Ghetto or in the Nazi death camps unless
they could be spirited away to safety.
Smuggling the children past Nazi guards through a variety of means
hiding them in body bags or under loads of goods Ms.
Sendler took them into the homes of Polish families, where they
were adopted and raised with false identities. Ms. Sendler made
lists of these children and placed the lists in a jar that she buried
in a garden, hoping she could someday dig up the jar, locate the
children and inform them of their past.
From 1942 to 1943, Ms. Sendler managed to smuggle 400 children out
of the Warsaw Ghetto before she was captured by the Nazis and severely
punished for her actions. Even under extreme torture, she refused
to reveal where the lists of the smuggled Jewish children were hidden.
Eventually, a member of the Polish underground bribed a guard to
release her, and she entered into hiding. Even then, she continued
to work with Zegota to rescue another 2,100 children.
It's a remarkable story, and considering all the remarkable stories
from the Holocaust that have surfaced over the past several years,
it's hard to believe that this one went largely unnoticed. And it
might have stayed that way, were it not for four high school students
from Uniontown, Kansas.
Changing the World
It began as a class assignment from their teacher, Milken Educator
Norm Conard (KS '92): create a year-long project for the National
History Day Competition that would, among other things, extend the
boundaries of the classroom to families in the community, contribute
to the learning of history, and meet the classroom motto, "He
who changes one person, changes the entire world."
As the four girls Elizabeth Cambers, Megan Stewart, Sabrina
Coons and Janice Underwood began doing their research, they
discovered an article in U.S. News and World Report about Ms. Sendler,
and were surprised by the number of children she had saved.
"I thought it might have been a typographical error,"
said Mr. Conard, "since I had not heard of this woman nor her
story."
91 year-old Irena Sendler in her Warsaw apartment (Photo by Karen
Conard)
The girls wrote a play based on her life called "Life in a
Jar," which they entered into the National History Day Competition
and began performing in front of numerous community organizations.
What happened next is a story in itself.
The play was extremely well-received every time it was performed.
Though Uniontown is a small community with little ethnic diversity
and no Jewish residents, the response to the play was so extraordinary
that the town designated an "Irena Sendler Day."
Assuming that Ms. Sendler was no longer living, the four students
began a search for her final resting place. They were surprised
to learn that she was still alive, living in poverty in Warsaw,
Poland. They contacted Ms. Sendler, telling her of their project
and the response it was getting. She wrote back letters written
in Polish, which were translated with the help of a Polish student
at a local Kansas college.
"Your performance and work is continuing the effort I started
over fifty years ago," wrote Ms. Sendler. "You are my
dearly beloved girls."
The girls decided to raise money on behalf of Ms. Sendler and other
rescuers. They began taking a jar to each performance to collect
donations. They contacted an organization in New York City called
the Jewish Foundation for the Righteous, which helped the girls
send the money they had raised to a Polish bank in Warsaw.
At the same time, they began receiving national
attention for the story they had "rediscovered," appearing
on C-SPAN, National Public Radio, CBS, and numerous newspaper articles.
They were invited to perform their play in Washington, D.C. and
before the Jewish Foundation for the Righteous in New York City.
Mr. Conard was contacted for the book and film rights to his students'
story.
A True Heroine
One day in January 2001, the girls performed their play before a
large school district in Kansas City, about 100 miles from Uniontown.
In the audience was John Shuchart, a Jewish educator and businessman
who was so moved by the performance that he asked to have lunch
with Mr. Conard and his students that day. Hearing that Ms. Sendler
was still alive, Mr. Shuchart told the girls he would raise the
money to send them to Warsaw to meet her in person and bring back
her story. Because she is 91 and in poor health, he urged the girls
to travel as soon as possible.
Mr. Shuchart raised the money in 24 hours,
and on May 22, 2001, Mr. Conard, his wife, the four students and
several of their parents traveled to Warsaw, Poland, where they
met Ms. Sendler in person.
It was an emotional moment. When the 91 year-old woman pushed her
walker across her apartment to greet them, what the four young girls
saw was a heroine of immense stature. But with the modesty one often
finds in truly heroic people, Ms. Sendler characterized herself
and her life as merely ordinary.
The girls still perform their play in front of local churches, civic
groups and clubs, with performances booked until the summer of 2002.
They continue to conduct research on Ms. Sendler's story and correspond
regularly with Ms. Sendler and the people she rescued.
They have established an e-mail address - isendler@hotmail.com
- which receives daily messages from across the nation. Three more
students have joined the group to help with all the email and research.
They have donated their correspondence with Ms. Sendler to various
universities, historical societies, and to the Jewish Foundation
for the Righteous in Chicago and New York City. A local college
professor has been using their letters from Ms. Sendler in his World
History class.
The story of Irena Sendler has had a profound effect not only on
those who have heard the story, but on the storytellers as well.
The girls regularly write on their homework papers notes such as,
"I'm changing the world" and "Irena's story must
be told."
"I've traveled with the girls to numerous performances and
watched the great emotion that pours out of the audience during
their presentation," said Mr. Conard. "They have literally
taken our class motto 'He who changes one person, changes
the entire world.' and brought it to life."
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