In late May of 2008, Melissa Cernigoy, a fourth-year ±«Óătv student in international development and economics, spent 10 days visiting the Reichstag, Checkpoint Charlie, Plazow, Treblinka, Birkenau and Auschwitz. A participant on the âMarch of Remembrance and Hope,â a Holocaust and genocide study and leadership mission organized by the Canadian Centre for Diversity, she was accompanied by other Canadian and American students, as well as three Holocaust survivors.
SEE PHOTOS:ÌęMarch of Remembrance and Hope
Ms. Cernigoy, who had never before been to Europe, had less than a week to adjust to the unfamiliar continent before the group viewed Auschwitz.Ìę
âDisplays and collections of shoes, eyeglasses, artifactsâŠ. They have, like, rooms filled with these things,â she says. The group also saw the âofficeâ of the notorious Joseph Mengele. âThey had a room that had his operating table, and some of the equipment that he used. But it looked more like torture equipment.â
The students toured Warsaw, where pictures of deported families are hung in the windows of the preserved Jewish neighborhoods, and marched into the forest to visit the hidden mass graves of Holocaust victims. These are just the a few details of the trip: the itinerary was intense, both chronologically and emotionally.
No 'abnormal' reactions
How do students who have never left their homelands deal with the horrifying reminders of the Holocaust? Ms. Cernigoy is adamant that there is no way to prepare for the experience. Faced with the atrocities of history, studentsâ responses varied. âThere were a lot of different reactions. Some people were making jokes, some people got very upset, some people couldnât look at certain thingsâŠÌę (The guides) always said that no reaction was abnormal to an abnormal situation⊠I didnât feel like talking very much. I just felt like being quiet.â
Ms. Cernigoy is still very quietâat times, discussing details, she is almost inaudible. It is clear where the âRemembranceâ aspect of the march comes into play. What is less obvious is how this voyage could possibly inspire hope. However, Ms. Cernigoy is also candid about the tripâs happier moments, including a traditional dinner in a Berlin synagogue. âEveryone was really exhausted,â she says with a smile. âThis one girl, she actually fell asleep while she was eating, which was pretty memorable.â
The students on the March of Remembrance and Hope also saw beautiful things, such as a 17th-century Polish synagogue miraculously spared by the ravages of war, and participants were encouraged to consider the most meaningful aspects of their own lives. Marching on foot from Auschwitz to Birkenau, a three-kilometre journey, each student inscribed their name tag with a âreason to marchâ â a personal symbol of hope on the journey ahead.
A lot has changed for Melissa Cernigoy since her return to Canadian soil.Ìę âIâve always had an interest in history. A lot came out of this trip that I didnât expect.â Ms. Cernigoyâs viewpoint on conventional âentertainmentâ has changed, for instance: she found the violence in a recent war blockbuster âso disturbing that I wanted to leave the theatre⊠I just donât think that itâs funny. Maybe I would have before; I donât know⊠I feel a lot more sensitive to violence. Iâve noticed that a lot. Like, even watching movies that are supposed to be entertaining.â Ms. Cernigoy is adamant, however, that the tripâs affirmative effects on her life have been most noticeable: she encourages students to undergo the March, a difficult, but life-changing, experience.
Bringing it home
Ms. Cernigoy tells me that students returning from the March of Remembrance and Hope are expected to remain active witnesses to what theyâve seen, engaging in activities in their communities that promote peace and tolerance. Since her arrival home, Ms. Cernigoy has been active in re-vitalizing ±«Óătvâs SHOUT group. On Tuesday, Jan. 27, SHOUT Halifax, STAND and the Jewish Student Association are holding an event titled âRemembering Dachau to Defend Darfur.â The event will be held at 7 p.m. in Room 307 of the Dal SUB, and other events are planned in the future; the group is cooperative by nature and will frequently unite with other societies to plan their events.
âSHOUT is a very broad organization⊠weâre just getting ratified with the DSU.â
The 2009 March will be held from May 14-22; application information can be found on the Canadian Centre for Diversityâs website, , with a deadline of January 23, 2009.
As Ms. Cernigoy recounts her trip through Germany and Poland, neither of us mention perhaps the most frightening truthâthat, at some time in the future, our generation will be the first to carry the memory of the Holocaust without the reminders of eyewitnesses. Remembrance will be the most important tool in learning from the devastating lessons of history. Hope has its place, too.
âAt the closing ceremonies, I was singing this song,â she says with a laugh, âand Iâm not a singer! But I was singing this song with three other girls. It was actually a Hebrew song, and I donât know Hebrew⊠but they wanted me to sing with them, and so I just kind of learned the words phonetically.â
She pauses. âAnd so we were singing it, and as we were singing it, everyone was joining in. Nobody really knew the words, but they were all joining in, and everybody was clapping. And it was just this really overwhelming moment.â
She doesnât know Hebrew, but Ms. Cernigoy does know the translation to the words of the song, when I ask: itâs âlet peace begin with me.â