Federation Star - March 2021

Page 13

COMMUNITY FOCUS

March 2021

Federation Star

13

M E M BE RS I N T HE NEW S

Remembrance Local members, Felicia and Kenneth Anchor, chair U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s southeast virtual event by Julia Browning

F

elicia Anchor knows how lucky she is to have been born. Both of her parents are survivors of the Holocaust. Though lucky might not be a word one thinks of to describe people who went through such a life-threatening experience, Felicia says that luck and the fact that her parent’s youth, which made them fit for slave labor, is what kept them alive. In the 1940s, Felicia’s parents were teenagers living in Poland when the Nazis invaded. Her mother, only 14, was separated from her parents in Auschwitz. Her father had gifted her a comb for her beautiful long hair during their last conversation, but within hours, all her hair was shorn off and her clothes stripped away, as the German soldiers instilled a sense of fear and humiliation into her heart that she would never forget. Felicia’s father was separated from his family at 17 and sent into slavery, moving rocks 24 hours a day to create caves, where the German army would secretly build missiles they would use to bomb across Europe. The two endured pain, grief, humiliation and fear for years, until the war finally ended, they were liberated, and the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen, where Felicia’s mother was imprisoned, became a place for displaced survivors. There, Felicia’s parents met and fell in love. They married, had Felicia a year later, and set forth to America to start a new life. Years later, part-time Naples residents Felicia and husband, Kenneth Anchor, shoulder the responsibility of ensuring that Holocaust survivors’ tales of trauma and triumph are never forgotten. Their heritage brought them together when they were just teenagers — each was the president of their respective Jewish youth group. The two have been together ever since. “I love her every bit as much today, if not more, than I did way back when,” says Kenneth, a clinical psychologist. Now, the pair live in Naples and recently served as chairs of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s southeast virtual event titled “What You Do Matters.” “The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was honored to have Felicia and Kenneth Anchor chair our first-ever southeast virtual ‘What You Do Matters’ event,” said Robert Tanen, director of the Museum’s southeast region. “The Anchors’ leadership role with the Museum and their personal commitment to Holocaust remembrance is inspiring, and we are forever grateful for their ongoing support.” Nowadays, children in the U.S. learn about the Holocaust as early as elementary school. That was not the case when Felicia was growing up. Though the tragedy was close to home, she heard “not a word about it,” she recalls. This is because, as

historians explain, it takes many years for people to be able to reflect on such a monumental tragedy. Felicia didn’t realize how formative her childhood experience was until she met other children of Holocaust survivors and felt an “invisible thread” that tied them together. “It was then that I promised myself I was going to learn and know about what happened to my family and why it happened to my family,” Felicia says. She committed herself to researching the Holocaust, and when the first gathering

ZOOM IN FOR

Four More Fabulous Events in March

For full details on these and other events in the Jewish Book Festival, see pages 16-22 in this issue.

Felicia and Kenneth Anchor

People of the Book H I S T O R Y

Neal Bascomb Wednesday, March 3 at 7:30 p.m.

MEMOIR/HOLOCAUST

Ariana Neumann Thursday, March 11 at 1 p.m.

Credit: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum

of Holocaust survivors happened in America in 1983, her family attended. A few years later, she went to the inauguration of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C. Now Felicia and Kenneth play a vital role in supporting the Naples Holocaust Museum. They know that everyone studying this history, not the Jewish community alone, is the only way to ensure society is not doomed to repeat it. “For so many years we talked about perpetrators and victims,” Felicia says. “Now we’re talking about upstanders, people who are willing to stand up and do something. All it takes for evil to occur is for good people to do nothing. We want them to move from being bystanders to upstanders, people who will have a voice,

people who will stop other people from saying and doing hurtful things.” During the fundraising event on Feb. 11, the couple helped showcase the museum’s commitment to preserving the history, an intention that’s increasing in importance every day as the last eyewitnesses will not be here to share what they saw for much longer. To preserve the history, the museum is creating a new section that will display the many artifacts they have curated, digitized and archived. The couple agrees that Holocaust education is of the utmost importance for a society free of hatred to come to fruition. “Felicia has taught me that educating just one person can make a difference,” Kenneth says.

PROUDLY SUPPORTING THE JEWISH BOOK FESTIVAL

CELEBRATING OUR 19TH YEAR! LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED!

5450 TAMIAMI TRAIL N. NAPLES 239.594.1555 ACROSS FROM WATERSIDE SHOPS ONE BLOCK NORTH OF PINE RIDGE ON U.S.41 • WWW.ALISONCRAIGHOME.COM

M E M O I R

Bess Kalb Monday, March 15 at 1 p.m.

AMERICAN JEWISH STUDIES/ WOMEN’S STUDIES

Pamela S. Nadell Tuesday, March 30 at 7:30 p.m.

To register, please visit www.JewishBookFestival.org.


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Articles inside

With students back at school, Chabad gears up for a new semester

2min
page 38

Shalom Naples Families!

1min
page 38

Garden of Arts provides hands-on learning

3min
page 37

Chocolate Seder

1min
page 37

Chabad Center update

3min
pages 36-37

Allow us to introduce ourselves

1min
page 36

How to best express gratitude during the pandemic

2min
page 36

What a year!

1min
page 35

Beth Tikvah update

2min
page 35

Temple Shalom events open to the community

1min
page 35

Hadassah happenings

2min
page 34

Let’s reclaim the America our founders imagined!

1min
page 33

Marching forward

3min
page 32

What does Freedom mean in 2021?

2min
page 31

Pasach

2min
page 31

The small things count

3min
page 30

Passover deconstructed

3min
page 30

FIDF launches new broadcast platform

1min
page 29

Virtual Passover cooking class with Debbie Kornberg

1min
page 29

Sarah live!

3min
page 27

Pastelito – Sephardic Kugel

5min
page 26

Holiday’s woes, D.C. universe stuff, Grammys and Diamond

4min
page 24

Caregiving during COVID – What not to say

4min
page 22

How Jewish women have led the way in America

3min
page 21

Required “reading” for daughters, mothers, grandmothers – and those who love them

3min
page 20

Ten timely tips for Zooming into the Book Festival

1min
page 18

Southwest Florida Jewish Pioneers series

1min
page 14

MEMBERS IN THE NEWS

4min
page 13

What makes a “good man” a hero of the Capitol siege or a hero of the Holocaust?

2min
page 12

2gs reflect on January 6

4min
page 12

WCA programs are Zooming along

4min
page 10

MCA unprecedented season marches on

3min
page 9

A Message from your Book Festival Co-Chairs

2min
page 8

Freedom

1min
page 8

Israeli innovation benefits mankind

1min
page 6

Can we speak with one voice?

5min
page 6

From our donors

3min
page 5

Virtual trip to the wonders of the Negev

1min
pages 4-5

Your support makes our new home possible

3min
page 4

The annual Jewish Community Day of Learning with evening bonus — a not-to-be-missed event

2min
page 3

Collier County Sheriff’s Office chief to speak on hate crimes

1min
pages 2-3

Day and Evening of Learning

1min
page 2

Spring and new beginnings

2min
page 1
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