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Description:
In the winter of 1945, on the day of her liberation from six years of Nazi rule, Gerda Weissmann clung to life at the end of a 350-mile death march. She weighed 68 pounds, her hair had turned white, and she had not had a bath in three years. She survived with courage, grace and dignity.
Gerda Weissmann Klein, renowned motivational speaker and Holocaust survivor, teaches each one of us about tolerance, understanding and making a difference. Gerda Klein’s spirit helped her survive six years under Nazi rule; through her story, and her unique perspective, she continues to help each one of us to understand the dangers of hate and extremism.
Students involved in STAND UP. SPEAK OUT. LEND A HAND will hear from Gerda during a special interactive videoconference event and then embark upon their own service learning projects. Each participating school will be tasked with designing and implementing a service learning project that combats social issues in their community. Schools will have access to an online service-learning curriculum from The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation.
Students will then reconvene via videoconference to share their service learning projects with Gerda and the Klein Foundation during a celebratory "Project Collaboration Videoconference" in March.
It's a three-month service learning challenge. Are your students ready to STAND UP, SPEAK OUT, and LEND A HAND against extremism and hunger?
Resources:
Teacher's Guide: Download the Teacher's Guide for this program! (in Word Format)
Materials you'll receive upon registration:
inTIME Magazine's Stand Up, Speak Out, Lend a Hand! Kit: Special inTIME edition includes student and teacher guides. Dowload the student and teacher inTIME Magazine guides here. You'll also receive a kit from the Foundation!
One Survivor Remembers: Each school participating in this project will receive a copy of the Academy-Award winning documentary about Gerda's life, One Survivor Remembers. Copies of the documentary are compliments of the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation.
Teaching Tolerance Kit (A Joint Project with the Southern Poverty Law Center): A comprehensive educational kit based upon the Oscar-winning documentary, One Survivor Remembers. This new kit, with more than a dozen standard-based lesson plans, is highlighted by the SPLC's Teaching Tolerance Magazine.
Creating a Sleepout: The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation is proud to recognize and highlight the achievements of Clarence High School in New York. We asked Kevin Starr, student council advisor and some of his students, to allow us to share their story on the Klein Foundation Website. We invite you to read about their successes and utilize the guidelines below to create your own “Sleepout” in your community.
Hunger Service Learning Program: The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation has established the HUNGER SERVICE LEARNING PROGRAM to enable youngsters in communities across America to play a role in ending hunger. This national initiative will help to fulfill Gerda Klein’s greatest wish: that no child should ever know the hunger she once knew. This national service learning program gives young people the opportunity to take responsibility through the concrete action of working to end hunger.
Teaching Tolerance Kit (A Joint Project of The Southern Poverty Law Center): A comprehensive educational kit based upon the Oscar-winning documentary, One Survivor Remembers. This new kit, with more than a dozen standard-based lesson plans, is highlighted in SPLC’s Teaching Tolerance Magazine.
Promoting tolerance, understanding and non-violence : Read how Gerda inspired the Columbine School Community
Gerda Weissmann Klein addreses the United Nations: Read about Gerda's Address to the United Nations in January 2006.
The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation: Please see information about the foundation below.
The United States Memorial Holocaust Museum: Find out more about the Holocaust and view the museum's online collections.
Yad Vashem: Virtually visit Israel's memorial to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust. The official website of Yad Vashem includes online exhibits, archives, and The Hall of Names, a database of Holocaust victims.
Preparing Students for the December 2nd Videoconference Event:
Review Documentary: During the first week of November, you will receive a copy of the Academy Award-winning documentary about Gerda's life. Please review this documentary with your students. For more information on the documentary, please see
Prepare Questions: During the December 2nd, videoconference, select schools will have an opportunity to ask Gerda questions. Please have your students brainstorm questions ahead of time and as a class, choose their top 5.
The top five questions should be emailed to Heather Weisse at hweisse@magpi.net. Sites can submit their questions for Gerda up until 12:00 noon on Tuesday, November 25, 2008. Those schools who have a question selected will be notified via email by 12:00 noon on Monday, December 1, 2008.. If we do not receive any questions from your site, your students will not be able to ask questions during the event. For those sites who are webstream only, a selected question will be asked by the videoconference moderator on your behalf.
What's happening in your own community: Have students investigate social issues in their own community and start brainstorming ideas for service learning projects.
Creating and Implementing a Service Learning Project
What kind of project should your students design: Any - as long as they are working to help combat social issues in their own community. You may want to start by asking students an essential question: What can we do to help?
Need ideas? Check out the Hunger Service Learning Program developed by the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation.
Have a sleep-out! The Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation is proud to recognize and highlight the achievements of Clarence High School in New York. We asked Kevin Starr, student council advisor and some of his students, to allow us to share their story on the Klein Foundation Website. We invite you to read about their successes and utilize the guidelines below to create your own “Sleepout” in your community.
Interested in what other students have done? Take a look at the 2006-2007 Service Learning Projects
Preparing your presentation for the Collaboration Collage Videoconference Event
PROJECT PARAGRAPHS: Once your school has decided on a service learning project, please send me a short paragraph (no more than 3-4 sentences), describing your project. We'll be posting project descriptions on the website and using them to help us formulate the program presentation order for the March 3rd videoconference. Project descriptions should be sent via email to me (hweisse@magpi.net) no later than Friday, February 6, 2009. Don't forget to include a project title!
PROJECT PRESENTATIONS: During the wrap-up videoconference on March 3, 2009 each school will have 60 seconds to present their service learning projects. BE CREATIVE in your presentations - - it's your students' 2 minutes of national fame! Here are some presentation ideas that have worked well in the past:
- Multimedia
- Video presentation or "Public Service Announcement"
- Drama/Skit
- Create/Perform a song
- Create/Describe a piece of artwork
- Website design/presentation
- Mini Game-Show
- "News Report"
- Anything else you can think of!
During your presentation (however you decide to present!), you should incorporate the following information:
- The problem your service learning project addressed
- What made you decide to address this issue
- What you did as part of your service learning project
- Who your service learning project helped
- What you learned from participating in this service learning project
- How others can help address this same issue in their community
For those schools who may be unable to participate interactively in this event and will be watching the live webstream (instead of being interactive videoconference participants), we still want to include your school's presentation! Please videotape your students presentation and send it to me at 3401 Walnut Street, Suite 233A * Philadelphia, PA, 19104. You can send the video on a VHS tape or DVD and we'll play the tape as part of the videoconference event. Videos must be received by Monday, February 23, 2009 in order to be a part of the videoconference event.
Please note that all presentations must be 1 minute or less. Due to time constraints, your school will be politely cut off if they exceed the time limit.
The final videoconference program agenda will be emailed to everyone on Friday, February 27, 2009.
About Gerda Weissmann Klein
For years author, historian, and speaker, Gerda Weissmann Klein has captivated audiences worldwide with her powerful messages of hope, inspiration, love and humanity. In her speeches and books, Klein draws from her wealth of life experiences: from surviving the holocaust, meeting her future husband on the day of her liberation, to her journey to the United States , accepting an Oscar for a documentary based on her life, and her constant fight to promote tolerance and fight hunger.
In 1939, 15 year-old Gerda Weissmann Klein’s life would change forever as German troops invaded her home in Beilsko, Poland. This day would be forever ingrained in Gerda’s memory, as it was the last time she would ever see her family. Never losing hope, Klein would spend the next three years in a succession of slave-labor camps, until she was forced to walk in a 350-mile death march in which 2,000 women were subjected to exposure, starvation, and arbitrary execution. Despite such atrocities, Klein never lost the will to survive. Klein’s account of living through the Holocaust is documented in her classic autobiography, All But My Life, in print for 46 years in 57 editions. It was the foundation for the Oscar Winning HBO Documentary One Survivor Remembers.
One of the most remarkable chapters in Gerda’s life began when her future husband, Kurt Klein, an American intelligence officer, liberated her. Their story of meeting and life together has been featured on numerous television shows including Oprah, 60 Minutes and CBS Sunday Morning. A book of their letters to one another The Hours After, is a poignant collection of actual correspondence between Gerda and Kurt Klein following the war.
In 2004 Klein released, A Boring Evening at Home (dedicated to her late husband). The book offers glimpses into her life, and into the thoughts that have always vindicated her belief that the most treasured place on earth is home, and that the most beautiful and desirable aim for people is to spend “a boring evening” there with family.
The Kleins’ story is portrayed in the film Testimony, a permanent exhibit at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. In June 1997, President Clinton appointed Klein to the council of the Holocaust Museum. The 1995 HBO documentary, One Survivor Remembers, in which Gerda Klein recounts some of her wartime experiences, won a TV Emmy Award, two Cable Ace Awards, and an Oscar from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Gerda Klein’s editorial credits also include The Blue Rose, a story about the mentally retarded that subsequently became a film in India. Her work, Promise of a New Spring, is devoted to teaching young children about the Holocaust, while A Passion for Sharing is a biography of New Orleans philanthropist Edith Rosenwald Stern, which garnered its author the Valley Forge Freedom Award. In 1996, Klein was one of five women to receive the prestigious international Lion of Judah award in Jerusalem. More recently, she was featured on the cover of a McDougall-Littel educational textbook, The Americans, alongside such other notable figures as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Martin Luther King Jr., Ronald Reagan, and Gen. Norman Schwartzkopf. She was recently awarded the Brandeis University Sachar Award as well as the Blue Valley Good Neighbor Award. Gerda Klein served as the keynote speaker at the United Nations on January 27, 2006 at the first International Holocaust Remembrance Day Program.
Klein’s constant striving for the preservation of human rights and dignity has earned her seven Doctorates of Humane Letters, along with countless other awards. In 1998 along with her late husband, Klein founded the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation (www.kleinfoundation.org). Dedicated to easing human suffering wherever it maybe, Gerda has worked tirelessly with her foundation to fight hunger and violence, and to promote tolerance, lessen prejudice and encourage community service focused on local hunger relief. As a public non-profit, this small but most important foundation relies upon contributions and grants in order to accomplish its mission.
In October 2003 and again in September 2005, The Klein Foundation partnered with TIME Classroom to create a unique multimedia educational kit sent to almost 2 million high school students across the country entitled: “Stand Up, Speak Out, Lend a Hand.” This special school supplement s hares the Kleins’ experiences as the basis to teach students about the importance of respect, responsibility and acceptance of differences.
In the Fall 2005 a significant and exciting partnership was created between the Klein Foundation and Southern Poverty Law Center addressing the issues of anti-Semitism and intolerance in its larger context. To date, there have been over 68,000 requests for this kit in just over 10 months. This project is available FREE to every school in the country upon request. This Klein Foundation’s two educational programs were nominated as one of four finalists for outstanding student publications from the prestigious Educational Publishers Association of America in June 2004 (Stand Up, Speak Out Lend a Hand) and June 2006 (One Survivor Remembers).
About the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation
In 1998 along with her late husband, Gerda Weissmann Klein founded the Gerda and Kurt Klein Foundation. Dedicated to easing human suffering wherever it maybe, Gerda has worked tirelessly with her foundation to fight hunger and violence, and to promote tolerance, lessen prejudice and encourage community service focused on local hunger relief. As a public non-profit, this small but most important foundation relies upon contributions and grants in order to accomplish its mission.
In October 2003 and again in September 2005, The Klein Foundation partnered with TIME Classroom to create a unique multimedia educational kit sent to almost 2 million high school students across the country. This special school supplement s hares the Kleins’ experiences as the basis to teach students about the importance of respect, responsibility and acceptance of differences. This Klein Foundation/TIME Classroom program entitled Stand Up, Speak Out, Lend a Hand , was nominated as one of four finalists for outstanding student publications from the prestigious Educational Publishers Association of America in June 2004.
In the Fall 2005 a significant and exciting partnership was created between the Klein Foundation and Southern Poverty Law Center addressing the issues of anti-Semitism and intolerance in its larger context. To date, there have been over 70,000 requests for this kit in just over a year. This project is available FREE to every school in the country upon request.
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