[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 26 (Thursday, February 17, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S855]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GERDA WEISSMAN KLEIN
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I rise today to honor Gerda Weissman Klein,
Holocaust survivor and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
We tell ourselves never to forget, and we implore our children to do
the same. But we cannot do it alone.
We need to listen to those who remember not by choice, but because
they can never forget what they saw and what they survived.
With each passing year, fewer and fewer of these witnesses remain.
Even fewer of them speak English, or live in America, where we can hear
their stories first hand. And fewer still are like Gerda Weissman
Klein.
About a year and a half ago, Mrs. Klein and her son visited my
office. I invited Senators Levin and Cardin to join me. I will always
remember one observation she offered.
I remember it because she didn't say it as though she were teaching a
profound lesson, though it was profound. She didn't say it as though it
was the most important message she came to deliver, but it has stayed
with me to this day. She said it, incredibly, as an off-hand comment
while we were just chatting.
Mrs. Klein said this: ``Surviving is an incredible privilege, but it
is also a very deep responsibility.''
It was beyond humbling--that someone could see what she saw and lose
what she lost and endure what she endured, and still maintain such
perspective, and feel such responsibility.
Mrs. Klein continues to fulfill what she sees as her responsibility,
sharing her story and teaching us about tolerance. That's why we
fulfilled our responsibility to her--by recognizing her with highest
honor our country can give civilians, the Presidential Medal of
Freedom.
But more than that, we fulfill our responsibility by thanking her, by
appreciating her and by listening to her--so that we will never forget
what she cannot forget.
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