Lifestyle/Community
Holocaust poem makes young Gemma a big winner
Gemma Davies, a grade 10 Redhill School learner (pictured), conjuring up images of the Holocaust through her history lessons and the testimony of a survivor on video, produced the prizewinning poem in the Writing, Poetry and Art Competition of the Chapman University in the United States.
SUZANNE BELLING
PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLIED
Joseph Gerassi, executive head of Redhill, commented: “Reading Gemma’s poem I was immediately struck by her ability to identify with the victims who lived and died at the hands of the Nazis.
“While Gemma is not Jewish and has not been brought up imbued with the Holocaust, her poem clearly demonstrates the power of survivor testimony to evoke a visceral response generations later. I am incredibly proud of her achievement.”
The contest has been running for the past 17 years. This year it focused on “Telling it Forward: Making Memory Matter”, honing in on the transmission and subsequent preservation of Holocaust survivor memory. It was presented by the Rodgers Centre for Holocaust Education at this top California university.
This contest allows young high school learners from around the world to put a memory of a Holocaust survivor forward into a piece of art or writing. The contest is the largest of its kind, reaching some 20 states in the US as well as Canada, Poland and South Africa.
This year 5 700 learners from public and private schools, initially responded to submit essays, poems, films and artwork to the contest, inspired by the stories of Holocaust survivors via video testimonies made available to learners by the USC Shoah Foundation Institute and The 1939 Society.
Three works per participating school were then chosen and sent on to be entered officially in the contest. Those works were judged by a panel of Holocaust survivors, local business people, professionals, organisational leaders and Chapman faculty and students.
“For each learner, there is always one memory to which they especially connect, the memory they know they will never forget and that they want to share with others, that they want to ‘tell forward’, the theme of this year’s contest,” said Marilyn J Harran, director of the Rodgers Centre for Holocaust Education and Stern Chairman in Holocaust History.
Dr James L Doti, Chapman University’s president, has been a strong supporter of the contest since its inception.
The contest is presented in partnership with The 1939 Society and sponsored by the Samueli Foundation; Yossie and Dana Hollander; in co-ooperation internationally with The Forum for Dialogue for entries from Poland; Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre for those from South Africa; and both the Sarah and Chaim Neuberger Holocaust Education Centre and The Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre for those from Canada.
Gemma, who has never visited a Holocaust Centre or been to a camp in Europe, told the SA Jewish Report she would really like to go.
Initially she did not experience empathy with the survivor testimony on the video she was shown, but “then I tried to imagine how I would have felt if I lost a sibling in the Holocaust”.
Her winning poem, which earned Gemma $500 and the school $200, appears below:
Brother
By Gemma Davies, Grade 10
Redhill School, Johannesburg, South Africa
Teacher: Michelle Kalify
Survivor Testimony: Engelina Billauer
Brother, you left me behind
To live in crowded isolation
Wide-eyed and headstrong and
alone
Brother, you left me behind
In a derelict town where no one spoke
No one listened
And no one but me could hear the roaring silence
Brother, you left me behind
To walk streets of crystal
Burning under a blazing sun
And brutalised under a daffodil star
Brother, you left me behind
With girls as much like orphans as those with living parents could be
While train tracks and strangers in black
Stole our families from our sides
Brother, you left me behind
To slave my gullible youth away
Making German grenades, detonated with irony
Fuelled by a fruitless and desperate optimism
Brother, you left me behind
Under siege from a downpour of explosions
A rain of carnage
On a parched landscape
Brother, you left me behind
To hold my wasting form upright
With the barrel of a gun in my side
While courage taunted from behind the façade of a brave face
Brother, you left me behind
Until I was left with near to nothing
A void where my vibrant heart should have been pounding
Left to barter hope for my survival
Brother, you left me behind
And when we were liberated
I was no more than oxygen rasping its way through an unwilling host
I had freedom but lacked someone with whom to share it
For you escaped long before me, and, Brother, you left me behind
But, Brother, I wish you’d left alive
Sharon Sweidan
March 11, 2016 at 2:57 pm
‘Beautifully written. Touches the heart’
Dr Andy Da Costa
March 14, 2016 at 6:31 pm
‘Magnificent. You deserve to have won ‘