Steven Spielberg Rails Against Anti-Semitism & “History Repeating Itself” At Stirring USC Shoah Foundation Ceremony
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it,” said Steven Spielberg today. “I am increasingly alarmed that we may be condemned to repeat history–to once again have to fight for the very right to be Jewish,” the Schindler’s List director added at an event Monday celebrating the 30th anniversary of the Spielberg founded Shoah Foundation.
“In the face of brutality and persecution, we have always been a resilient and compassionate people who understand the power of empathy,” Spielberg added to a full USC ballroom, including over 30 Holocaust survivors. “We can rage against the heinous acts committed by the terrorists of October 7th and also decry the killing of innocent women and children in Gaza.”
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Read Spielberg’s full remarks below.
Receiving USC’s University Medallion at the packed lunch Monday, the Oscar winner’s poignant comments come as friction in the Middle East took another turn.
(WATCH) Today at a USC Shoah Foundation ceremony, Steven Spielberg spoke out against antisemitism & in favor of the power of empathy https://t.co/cZs2lntQno pic.twitter.com/PR9a1etrRv
— Deadline Hollywood (@DEADLINE) March 25, 2024
Just hours before the Shoah Foundation gathering in LA, the UN Security Council passed a resolution demanding a ceasefire in Gaza between Israel and Hamas. As President Joe Biden and others in the administration have increasingly called for Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to take a more circumspect response amidst a humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian region, the U.S. today abstained at the UN, allowing the ceasefire vote to succeed.
“A ceasefire could have come about months ago if Hamas had been willing to release hostages,” Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said after the vote in New York as Netanyahu pulled a scheduled top level meeting set between American and Israeli officials in response. “Any ceasefire must come with the release of all hostages,” the U.S. UN representative went on say, adding the terrorist group “accepts the deal on the table” — mirroring the President’s previous words on the matter.
A longtime contributor to Democrats, Spielberg was one of the co-hosts for a re-election fundraising event for Biden in early December.
Reading the room today, Spielberg spoke not of the realpolitik machinations at play in the corridors of power. Instead the director was precise in his words on the struggle against prejudice, discrimination and hate that continues nearly 80 years after Nazis were defeated and World War II ended.
“This makes us a unique force for good in the world and is why we are here today to celebrate the work of the Shoah Foundation, which is more crucial now even than it was in 1994,” Spielberg said with Celina Biniaz, one of the last living Holocaust survivors from Schindler’s List in attendance.
Holocaust survivors were also the recipients of the University Medallion Monday.
Praising Spielberg’s speech as “perfection” when she came to speak herself today, Biniaz was literally the youngest person on Oscar Schindler’s list against deportation to a certain death by the Nazis during those terrible days in the Second World War.
“It is crucial in the wake of the horrific October 7 massacre,” Spielberg asserted bluntly earlier in tones similar to those he used late last year responding to the brutal surprise attack by Hamas that left over 1400 civilians and soldiers dead, hundreds taken hostage and reports of mass rapes. “It is crucial to the stopping of political violence caused by misinformation, conspiracy theories and ignorance. It is crucial because stopping the rise of anti-semitism and hate of any kind is critical to the health of our democratic republic and the future of democracy all over the civilized world.”
With the 1994-formed Shoah Foundation’s archive of nearly 60,000 testimonies of Holocaust survivors and witnesses to acts of genocide and crimes against humanity, Spielberg is only the fourth recipient of USC’s University Medallion.
The award is a recognition of an individual who has made “exceptional contributions to USC, society and humankind,’ as USC president Carol Folt told the crowd of 265 in the Town and Gown ballroom Monday. In that context and with Spielberg and survivors sitting nearby, Folt stated: “We feel the searing pain of October 7 and we must fight anti-Semitism.”
Media mogul and former US Ambassador to the UK, Walter Annenberg was awarded the first University Medallion in 1994, the same year the Shoah Foundation was founded. Dana and David Dornsife were jointly given the second University Medallion in 2011 for the architectural electronic and lighting design firm founder and the steel executive’s support of neuroscience research.
Here is Spielberg’s speech in full:
Good afternoon everyone.
“It fills me up,” as my late mom Leah used to say, to be here with you today–30 years after the Shoah Foundation was founded and 20 years after the University of Southern California became our dedicated partner in this endeavor–to celebrate what we have accomplished and reflect on all that we hope to achieve. I am grateful to President Folt for bringing us together and for her unflagging leadership and support. Please join me in thanking her for her ongoing commitment to our mission.
For many years, I have been incredibly fortunate to spend much of my professional life telling stories. Stories are the foundation of history. Stories can be magical, inspirational, terrifying, and unforgettable. They offer a snapshot of humanity in all its beauty and tragedy. And they are one of our strongest weapons in the fight against anti-Semitism and racial and religious hatred.
The Holocaust, or as my parents called it, “The Great Murders,” is one of the stories I heard growing up. In my grandparents’ home in Cincinnati, where I lived until I was three, my grandmother taught English to Hungarian Holocaust survivors. During these lessons, I would often sit at the table with her, and it was there that I learned to count… not in school but by being taught the numbers tattooed on survivors’ arms. One man rolled up his sleeve showed me what the number 5 looked like, then a 3 then a 7. Then he said, “Wanna see a trick: this is a 9, but when I go like this, now it’s a 6. I was only three, but I never forgot. Years later, when I was in high school in California, I was one of a small number of Jews at my school, and I got to experience what it was like to be on the receiving end of anti-semitism both verbally & physically and through silent exclusion. It was a stark reminder that even though decades had passed since the Holocaust, the distance between my grandmother’s table and the halls of my high school wasn’t very far and that discrimination against the Jews was not something that started or ended with World War II.
In the years leading up to and during the production of Schindler’s List, immersing myself in the darkness of the Holocaust was imperative. The one thing that always punctured the darkness was when Holocaust survivors would visit us in Krakow. I remember every survivor had a story to recount. But I also remember that it pained me that their stories were not being documented as proof of what had been done to them and to all the Jews of Europe. By coming forward to share their stories on camera, a permanent record would be preserved for their families, for history, for education, and for every future generation. This became my mission, this became our work. This became the Shoah Foundation.
And here we are, 30 years later, still determined to give those voices every opportunity to be heard. The 56,000 testimonies we have recorded are invaluable in teaching new generations what survivors have intoned for 80 years. Never again. Yet in listening to them, the echoes of history are unmistakable in our current climate. The rise of extremist views has created a dangerous environment, and radical intolerance leads a society to no longer celebrate differences but instead conspire to demonize those who are different to the point of creating “The Other.”
The idea of “The Other” is an idea that poisons discourse and creates a dangerous wedge throughout our communities.
“Othering” rationalizes prejudice and encourages the willful denial and distortion of reality to enforce preconceptions.
“Othering” is the kindling that fuels extremism and illiberalism. We see every day how the machinery of extremism is being used on college campuses…where now, fully 50 percent of students say they have experienced some discrimination because they are Jewish. This is happening alongside anti-Muslim, Arab, and Sikh discrimination. The creation of “the Other” and the dehumanization of ANY GROUP based on their differences, is the foundation of fascism. It’s an old playbook dusted off and being widely distributed today!
“Those who can not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” I am increasingly alarmed that we may be condemned to repeat history–to once again have to fight for the very right to be Jewish. In the face of brutality and persecution, we have always been a resilient and compassionate people who understand the power of empathy. We can rage against the heinous acts committed by the terrorists of October 7th and also decry the killing of innocent women and children in Gaza. This makes us a unique force for good in the world and is why we are here today celebrate the work of the Shoah Foundation, which is more crucial now it even was in 1994.
It is crucial in the wake of the horrific October 7 massacre.
It is crucial to the stopping of political violence caused by misinformation, conspiracy theories and ignorance.
It is crucial because stopping the rise of anti-semitism and hate of any kind is critical to the health of our democratic republic and the future of democracy all over the civilized world.
This brings me back to our celebration of 30 years of capturing the stories that the world must never forget. The 56,000 testimonies that we have recorded are a foundation upon which bridges can be built and we are building those bridges. A few months ago, at a gathering of a group of survivors, an 82-year-old woman named Hana Rychik shared what I know so many of us are wishing–that those who are currently being held hostage in Gaza should be safe and have hope that they will return home. And then she added something that I know means something to everyone here. “We need Peace. Peace and understanding. We should respect each other.” She said.
I want future generations to hear that story when they sit at their grandparent’s kitchen table, as I did so many years ago. I want them to hear the stories of courage from the past that the Shoah Foundation will continue to record. I also want them to know that we have fought against history repeating itself by celebrating Jewish survival and vitality. I want them to know that we believe in a just world for everyone and will always embrace Hana’s eternal wish for peace, understanding, and human dignity. When her wish becomes reality–and we can live in a world where our essential freedoms are common across all countries, peoples, and religions- that will be the most joyful story ever told.
It is now my great honor and privilege to introduce a survivor who has become one of the Shoah Foundation’s greatest champions and a treasured friend. Please welcome Ms. Celina Biniaz.
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