[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 72 (Thursday, April 27, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S2614]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO ALTER WIENER
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I want to take a few minutes today
to honor Alter Wiener, a selfless Oregonian who endured the horrors of
the Holocaust and has shared his powerful story with countless students
and adults. I would like to share his story with the Senate so that my
colleagues can hear how he survived the Nazi atrocities and came to
live in Hillsboro, OR, teaching young men and women in my home State
the dangers of intolerance and exclusion.
Alter Wiener's story begins more than 90 years ago in the Polish town
of Chrzanow, where he was born on October 8, 1926. Like many Jewish
children, he attended both public and religious school and was taught
the importance of family and faith. What was a happy childhood ended
abruptly when the Nazis invaded his hometown in September of 1939. Mr.
Wiener fled with his mother and siblings, but his father, forced to
stay behind, was ultimately murdered by the Germans.
Barred from practicing his faith or attending school, Mr. Wiener was
eventually ripped from his home in the middle of the night and deported
to Blechhammer, a forced labor camp. He saw and experienced
unimaginable horrors as he was moved from labor camp to labor camp,
spending 3 long years in five concentration camps. When the Russian
Army freed him in May 1945, he weighed only 80 pounds.
Mr. Wiener made his way to New York City, where he joined his
cousins, the only other members of a family that numbered 123 to
survive the Nazi atrocities. In New York, he worked tirelessly to
rebuild his life, earning his high school diploma at age 38 and then a
degree from Brooklyn College. He got married, started a family, and
worked as an accountant. Through it all, he rarely spoke of surviving
the Holocaust or the atrocities he had witnessed and endured. He says
now that he simply didn't feel others would understand.
In 2000, Mr. Wiener moved to Hillsboro, OR. The Oregon Holocaust
Resource Center asked him to share his story, and, though he hesitated
at first, he ultimately agreed to speak at Century High School. To his
surprise, Mr. Wiener received hundreds of letters from students
thanking him for changing their lives.
Mr. Wiener has since gone on to volunteer his time and energy to
Holocaust education, giving more than 850 presentations to a wide range
of audiences. In 2007, he published his autobiography ``64735: From a
Name to a Number,'' detailing his harrowing experiences under the Nazi
regime and his life thereafter.
Many of my colleagues have heard me talk about my own family's
experience: how my parents fled Nazi Germany, how not everybody made it
out, how we lost family in Kristallnacht and at Theresienstadt.
Tolerance and inclusiveness are issues the Wydens take very seriously.
That is why it is so special for me to be able to pay tribute to Alter
Wiener today and to honor his work.
There is a concept in Judaism called tikkun olam, which means to
repair the world. Truly, I can think of no bigger way to describe Alter
Wiener's work than repairing the world. Every time he shares his story,
more people understand the horrors of Nazi persecution and the
inhumanity of the Holocaust. People also understand the importance of
tolerance, pluralism, and inclusion, and they see the power of the
human spirit to endure.
Today I offer my deepest affection and a heartfelt thank you to Alter
Wiener for using your voice to teach generations to come to never, ever
forget.
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