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The Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust and BPCA Dedicate “The Children’s Tree,” a Maple Descended from a Tree Planted by Children at Theresienstadt Concentration Camp

Museum of Jewish Heritage hosts a special dedication ceremony for the newly-planted Children’s Tree on Thursday, December 2, 2021; Watch the ceremony here

On Thursday, December 2, 2021, the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust and Battery Park City Authority held a special ceremony to dedicate “The Children’s Tree”, the descendant of one planted by Jewish children inside the Theresienstadt (Terezín) concentration camp.

The tree, a silver maple, was just relocated from a historic property in New Hope, Pennsylvania, and planted near the front entrance of the Museum. You can learn more about the tree and watch the dedication ceremony here or at https://mjhnyc.org/blog/dedication-of-the-childrens-tree-a-living-artifact-from-theresienstadt/.

“With roots born of the Holocaust, the tree—now firmly planted in the ground outside our museum—has branches that point us towards a brighter future,” said Museum President and CEO Jack Kliger. “We are calling this silver maple “the Children’s Tree” because of you, the children of today and tomorrow. By learning about the children who planted and nurtured the original Tree of Life 80 years ago, you are becoming witnesses to the story of the Holocaust and caretakers of a piece of history in your own backyard.”

The dedication ceremony began with a program featuring remarks from a number of dignitaries, including Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. Representative to the United Nations, and Czech Consul General Arnošt Kareš.

“We are all moved by different exhibits, different ways of telling the stories of the Holocaust. For me, personally, the story of this tree is one of the most powerful I have ever come across,” Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

Said Battery Park City Authority President & CEO B.J. Jones: “We are honored to have planted The Children’s Tree here in Battery Park City and are humbled by our responsibility to care for it for generations to come. The tree serves as an important symbol of our efforts, in partnership with the Museum of Jewish Heritage, to fight intolerance and foster inclusivity both locally and globally.”

The event included remarks from Consul General of the Czech Republic Arnošt Kareš; Mara Sonnenschein, the great-granddaughter of Dorette Roos, who died at Theresienstadt; and, Paul Radensky, Senior Director for Education at the Museum of Jewish Heritage; and, a performance from the student choir at PS/IS 276: The Battery Park City School, located across the street from the Museum.

Several Holocaust survivors, including Theresienstadt survivor Fred Terna, attended as well. Said Terna, My feeling of the tree is one word: memory. This an occasion of remembering. This planting is a form of remembering and that’s what this tree is: continuity. That’s what the Museum does.”

After an indoor program, attendees moved outside to dedicate the tree, which stands near the front entrance to the Museum. Mr. Terna and Ms. Sonnenschein were among those who watered the tree, joined by a number of current and future members of the New York City Council.

The tree’s remarkable history is a moving tribute to spiritual resilience and hope. The Nazis allowed children at Theresienstadt (in what was then known as Czechoslovakia) to be educated as part of a promotional ploy to hide the camp’s genocidal purpose. In January 1943, a teacher named Irma Lauscher bribed a Czech camp guard to smuggle a tree sapling into the camp. She wanted to plant the young tree in a secret ceremony to celebrate the holiday of TuB’Shevat (the Jewish new year for trees). Together with a group of Jewish children imprisoned in the camp, Lauscher planted the sapling. The group used their water rations to nurture it.

“The children at Theresienstadt cared for the tree every day, knowing that it would endure and live a life that they would not. This was an act of spiritual resistance of the highest magnitude,” said Michael Berenbaum, world-renowned historian and Director of the Sigi Ziering Institute at American Jewish University. “There is a story in the Talmud about an old man planting a tree. A man approaches him and says, ‘You fool, why are you planting a tree when you are not going to see its leaves?’ The old man responds that, ‘My grandfather planted a tree and I enjoyed its fruits. My grandchildren and future generations will enjoy its fruits.’”

Most of the children who planted the tree were deported to Auschwitz, the largest extermination camp in Poland, and died there. Of the more than 15,000 Jewish children who were imprisoned in Theresienstadt during the Holocaust, fewer than 200 survived.

After liberation, survivors placed a sign at the base of the tree, proclaiming, “As the branches of this tree, so the branches of our people!” Although the tree was later destroyed in a flood, saplings had been cut from it and planted in Jerusalem, San Francisco, Chicago, Philadelphia, but not here in New York City, home to the largest community of Holocaust survivors and their descendants of any city outside Israel.

A Jewish philanthropist recently purchased a historic farm in Pennsylvania where seven trees grown from cuttings of the original tree are thriving, and agreed to donate one to the Museum. That 15-foot tree recently was transported to Battery Park and replanted – and will be cared for by students at PS/IS 276 for generations to come.

Read more:

Dedication Of The Children’s Tree, A Living Artifact From Theresienstadt

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