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<name xml:id="lkw">Weakly, Laura K.</name>
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<head>Speaking, despite pain</head>
<p>Mrs. Miriam Grossman has spoken to several 
groups about the Holocaust. These are her thoughts 
on why she has put aside her pain to do so:</p>
<p>For many years we heard that we should forget and 
forgive the horrors we lived through and the irreplaceable 
losses of our dear ones. That we should go on 
with life and look to the future because nothing good 
would come out of remembering bitterness.</p>
<p>History shows that forgetting brings on repetition, 
and that it is not humanly possible to forgive the 
destruction of lives which belong only to God. It 
makes one aware how wrong government is when it 
treats minorities like second-class citizens.</p>
<p>It should alert us to what hate and injustice can 
do to other human beings.</p>
<p>It shows how tragedies occur when people think 
about their own gains without consideration of how 
it affects others-that power without justice leads to 
corruption.</p>
<p>It makes me sensitive to the value of every human 
being, regardless of their status, material possession, 
or appearance.</p>
<p>It makes me respect the individuality of others, 
without losing my own, unless they're bent on destroying 
the dignity of others.</p>
<p>It makes me also appreciate kindness and goodness 
in each individual, regardless of their background, 
national origin or religious preference.</p>
<p>It puts on me and any fair-minded individual the 
responsibility to witness to others what hate and 
injustice did and if not curbed will do again.</p>

<note><p>Editor's note:</p>
<p>Graveside services for Ignac Grossman, 79, were held March 29 at Mount Sinai Cemetery.</p>
<p>In addition to his wife, Miriam, Mr. Grossman is survived by a son, Alex, and two grandchildren.</p>

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