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Anne Frank’s Facebook page

According to this report in the Forward, Anne Frank has a Facebook page, as do other child victims of the Nazis. It's all part of a wider effort to memorialize Holocaust victims through social networking websites. 

The Forward reports:

The desire to personalize the identities of the 6 million Jews who perished in the Holocaust is not new. What is novel is the combination of this desire with a platform that is premised on empowering anybody to project his or her individuality far and wide.

There’s no more successful example of this fusion than the Facebook profile page of Henio Zytomirski. A small boy who must be no more than 7 or 8 years old appears in a black-and-white photo in the box provided for a profile picture. He looks full of joyful young life. But Henio has been dead since 1942, killed in a gas chamber at the Majdanek concentration camp when he was 9.

On March 25, which would have been his birthday, dozens of Facebook users wished him a happy birthday on his “wall.” As of April 12, he had 4,989 “friends.”One element unique to Henio’s profile is that it is being used to recount a narrative of this little boy’s life. In status updates written in Polish, Henio seemingly tells his story in his own voice.

On September 29 of last year, for example, this entry was posted: “Winter has arrived. Every Jew must wear the Star of David with his last name. A lot has changed. German troops walk the streets. Mama says that I shouldn’t be frightened, and always that everything is just fine. Always?”

The person posting in Henio’s name — and with the knowledge of his relatives — is Piotr Buzek, a 22-year-old history student from Lublin who works at the Brama Grodzka Cultural Center. According to Facebook’s policy, profiles of people other than oneself are allowed only with permission from the profiled person or, in this case, from that individual’s family. Buzek set up Henio’s page in August 2009, and since then he has been dutifully adding “friends” and posting photos and frequent updates. The center where he works was set up to promote the multicultural heritage of Lublin and has an archive of information and material on Henio’s life. It is from this that Buzek has created his virtual identity.

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04/15/10 10:52 PM

Please visit the following site and learn what children in Wellington New Zealand are doing.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7l2IgxA6CU

HOLOCAUST BUTTON COUNT: 1,229,244
We are collecting one button for every child who was a victim of the holocaust: We need 1.5 million buttons! 
This enormous task is designed to help our students understand the scale of the holocaust. When we have finished we will build a memorial artwork.

Please support us by sending us your spare buttons and financial assistance, to keep the school alive and to fulfill our honor bound commitment so that the words, “Never Again” will be true..

We are now well over the million-button mark and on our way to completing our goal.  The next step will be to generate funding to build the sculpture.  This week the Mayor of Wellington met with our students to discuss a suitable location for building the sculpture. We came away feeling positive that, while we still have some big hurdles ahead of us, our grand ideas and dreams can be realised. 

Please send what you can to:
Moriah College
P O Box 27-233, Marion Square,
Wellington, 6141
New Zealand

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