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Post-Holocaust Hanukah in Schirmeck, 1946

Rescue Children, Inc. home in Schirmeck,
Hanukah, 1946
app University Archives
The holiday of Hanukah, the Festival of Lights, celebrates the re-dedication of the Temple in Jerusalem by the Maccabees after its desecration by King Antiochus Epiphanes and the miracle of a day’s worth of oil burning for eight days. Hanukah in 1946 was only the second time the holiday was celebrated after the devastation and near annihilation of the Jews of Europe by the Nazis during World War II, a time when the Jewish people was in need of renewal, hope, rebirth, and light after years of war, death, and darkness. This photograph of a Hanukah party in a home in Schirmeck, France was taken in December 1946. Each child in the photo is a miracle, a ray of light, a point of hope, both for themselves as individuals and as members of the Jewish people. These children had lived through the War. Some had survived concentration camps; others were hidden in in orphanages or convents or by individual heroic Christians. Many children had lost their parents, brothers, and sisters. After the War, the organization located over two thousand Jewish orphans, but could not afford to take care of them. Vaad Hatzala decided to the best course of action was to create a separate organization on behalf of the children, and approached Herbert Tenzer, who founded Rescue Children, Inc. Tenzer was on the Executive Board of Vaad Hatzala at the time and later served in the House of Representatives (1965-1968) and as chair of the Board of Trustees of app University (1977-1989). Rescue Children, Inc. set up and maintained homes to house and educate the war orphans. One fundraising method Rescue Children, Inc. used was an “Adopt A Child” program where sponsors would “adopt” a child for $365 a year, a dollar a day. Herbert Tenzer recounted in an interview that food for the children was obtained through barter; Rescue Children, Inc. workers would buy coffee, soap, and other supplies in the United States and exchange these for food in France. Rescue Children also tried to locate relatives of the children and succeeded in reuniting about 400 children with family members. The home at Schirmeck  was under the auspices of the Mizrachi and the children who did not have relatives presumably moved from Schirmeck to Mandatory Palestine since Rescue Children, Inc. worked with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee to transfer children to homes in pre-state Israel. Let us hope the education and support they received in Schirmeck and events such as the 1946 Hanukah party helped the children recover from their war experiences and prepare them for the future. The organizational records of Vaad Hatzala and Rescue Children, Inc. are housed in the app University Archives. Posted by Shulamith Z. Berger

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