Toronto man says trip to Auschwitz is about educating future generations
TORONTO — Joseph Gottdenker was not there the day his relatives were herded into a Polish town square and marked for either a stint in a forced labour camp or instant execution at the hands of German troops. He was in the home of a nearby family being raised as a Catholic — hidden in plain sight for his own protection.
None of Gottdenker’s roughly 70 extended family members were immediately sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the notorious concentration camp hours away from their home village of Mielec. But Gottdenker, now 77, said some of them ultimately died there — just some of the roughly six million Jews slain as part of a Nazi-led genocide now simply referred to as the Holocaust.
Gottdenker, who has called Toronto home since 1958, said he visits the most infamous of the Nazi concentration camps at every opportunity to honour his family. But his next trip to Auschwitz on Monday, part of a commemorative event to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the camp’s liberation, will be more about the future than the past.
“People will see the ceremony on media, and that might be their first time they’ve ever heard of the Holocaust,” he said in a telephone interview. “If they ever come across a Holocaust denier, they can react accordingly through education. It’s the only way that we’re going to perpetuate the memory.”