Thanks to all for attending, supporting

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On Sunday October 18, 2009, you helped Words of Bonds bear witness as we honored Holocaust survivors, African American slave descendants and educators at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
Attendees traveled from places such as Israel, Jamaica, Washington DC, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Florida, South Carolina, and other parts of the world to pay tribute to our honorees and support the cause.. We are truly grateful to the many parents and children who sold cakes and cookies to raise funds for the event. We are thankful to everyone who attended.
We are thankful to our donors, pastors, rabbis, civic and political leaders from New York, Washington, Israel, France, Poland, and Italy; school principals, teachers, as well as our students and parents.
Our emcees, Denise Richardson and Julian Phillips, led a wonderful and exciting evening. The Noel Pointer Orchestra performed classical chamber music. Yeshiva Ateres Israel students and the Townsley Oratory Group also performed. The United States Marine Corps Color Guard presented their colors before the American, Israeli and African American national anthems were sung. Together, we sang each anthem, and it was most inspiring.
Seeing Jewish and African American children jumping double-dutch together, singing songs of inspiration together and generally uplifting all of us in the spirit of love was truly a sight to witness.
Stories were shared, honors were bestowed, and at the end of the evening we left inspired with a truly open vision that we must do whatever it takes to prevent the atrocities of slavery and the Holocaust from ever happening again.
Thank you again for being a part of this historic evening. At present, we are working to complete a documentary interviewing descendents of slaves and survivors of the Holocaust. We will keep you apprised on the progress of this important film, and we hope that you will continue to support our work.

ACKNOWLEDGING THE APPRECIATED SUPPORT


Our newest sponsor is the our Tribute’s Keynote Speaker Harley Lippman who has pledged a generous gift.

To learn how you can become a Words of Bonds sponsor, please click here.

For the biography of our latest sponsor, Lippman, please refer to the second page of our 2 page Program.

PRESS COVERAGE

For now, please enjoy the article from the Oct. 18 NY POST.

Words of Bonds at MSG
When it comes to the Holocaust and slavery in America, the rallying call to ‘Never Forget’ is one of the major themes of the Brooklyn-based non-profit School News Nationwide (SNN). The organization embraces this theme most fully through its Words of Bonds project and its Madison Square Garden event on Sunday, Oct 18, which pays tribute to Holocaust survivors, senior descendants of slaves and educators concerned with this sordid aspect of human history.
For full story, please click here.

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Please join us in honoring our participants

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WordsofBondsTribute

Help to spread the word: Invites, Posters, Flyers

partnerTo download the official invitation as a PDF file, please click here

To download the 11″x17″ Poster as a PDF file, please click here

To download the 8.5″x11″ Letter Flyer as a PDF file, please click here

On Sunday, October 18, 2009 at Madison Square Garden, Words of Bonds will pay tribute to several Holocaust survivors, senior descendents of slavery, and educators for their good work in teaching, influencing, and empowering our American youth to help ensure that atrocities such as slavery and the Holocaust never happen again. The honorees have been working on the Words of Bonds project since its inception, and truly deserve such a tribute. These honorees give selflessly of their time to visit many schools and cultural institutions to share their stories, and to educate our nation’s youth that they must work to prevent history from barbarically repeating itself.

The Honorees will be:

To learn more about the honoress, please click here.

TICKETS

$250 for an individual seat
$500 for two seats
$750 for three seats
$900 for four seats
$1,100 for five seats
$1,200 for a table of six

Kosher meals will be provided upon request. Please indicate in the special message field if you have any special seating requests, and we will do our best to accommodate you.

TO RESERVE YOUR SEATS

To reserve your seats for this special event by credit or debit card, safely and securely via our partner First Giving, please click the button below:

RES
To purchase tickets by mail, make check payable to:
School News Nationwide 1072 Fulton St :: Brooklyn, New York 11238

TO SPONSOR THIS EVENT

To learn more about partnering with us for this special event, please download our Partnership Package partner in PDF format here.

To view in a ebook viewer, please click here.

To sponsor or donate to this event directly, please click here to do so.

All donations are tax deductible. Should you have any questions, please email us at: CONTACT@WORDSOFBONDS.COM

LOCATION

Photo of where the Ceremony will be held MSG Theater Lobby.

Google Map to Madison Square Garden

Telling Two Stories With One Voice
by Steve Lipman

Bill Tingling, founder of a Brooklyn-based literacy project that teaches public school students the fundamentals of journalism, was looking for a new way to discuss prejudice a few years ago. Have the students — mostly from the minority community — interview Holocaust survivors, suggested an Irish friend of Tingling.

The result was Words of Bonds, a two-year-old initiative that has resulted in online interviews (www.wordsofbonds.com), speeches by survivors in public schools, an in-the-works documentary, and a kosher tribute dinner Sunday, Oct. 18, 6 p.m. at Madison Square Garden’s MSG Theater.  Several Holocaust survivors and descendants of slaves, and educators, will be honored at the dinner, which Tingling says is probably the first-such interracial event under the auspices of an organization with roots in the black community.

One of the honorees will be Tal Brody, the former Israeli basketball star, who will be attending the New York Knicks-Maccabi Tel Aviv exhibition game in the Garden earlier that day.

“We’re bearing witness” to two communities’ experience with prejudice, says Tingling, who in 1995 established School News Nationwide (SNN), a nonprofit multimedia educational group.  “If you don’t tell people about [the background of] the Holocaust and slavery, it’s going to repeat itself,” Tingling says. (For information: [718] 753-9920; bill@wordsofbonds.com.)
“Focusing on the preservation of stories from survivors of the Jewish Holocaust and accounts from the descendants of African American slaves, students will be able to examine the connections between these destructive events, as well as make links to currents events,” according to the organization’s mission statement.

Holocaust-denying statements by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadenijad give the project greater urgency, he says.

Words of Bonds is not specifically designed to improve relations between the Black and Jewish communities, though that may be a side-effect, says Rev. Paul Chandler, a coordinator of the upcoming event who was active in the Project CURE dialogue group after the 1991 Crown Heights riots.

The project’s focus is the two groups’ accomplishments, not their victimhood, Tingling says.

“I’m not a victim,” says Sally Frishberg, a Polish-born Holocaust survivor who will be honored at the Words of Bond event. A resident of Flatbush, Brooklyn, she was among a dozen members of her extended family saved from the Shoah by a sympathetic Polish farmer. After liberation, she moved to the U.S., worked as a public school teacher, then became a docent at the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust and a speaker at local schools, telling how she rebuilt her life here. “I don’t think of myself as a victim,”  she says.

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Words of Bonds extends condolences to Memorial guard’s family

anti-semitism, events, holocaust, news, racism No Comments »

It is apparent that we have not succeeded in teaching our children well. Our students from NYC Public School 270 were just around the corner preparing to enter the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, in Washington D.C., where a citizen with a history of hatred and white supremacy attacked the museum with a rifle. His racism, anti-Semitism, Neo Nazism and anti-African American hatred fueled this incident in which he intended to kill and destroy people’s lives. He succeeded by killing a heroic security guard, Stephen Tyrone Johns an African American who valiantly tried to apprehend the shooter and protect people. James van-Brunn the shooter was shot by other guards who arrested him and took him under control.

At the museum that night a new play “Anne and Emmett” was set to debut, a play about hate crimes which, much like “Words of Bonds,” attempts to explore lessons for children from humanity’s darkest periods. The play traces imaginary conversation between Anne Frank, a little girl killed in the Nazi Holocaust who wrote a diary and Emmett Till, a little black boy lynched in Mississippi in 1955. Today would have been Ms. Frank’s 80th birthday.

“Our whole play is about hate, to eradicate hate, and this is an example of hatred,” said the playwright Janet Langhart Cohen, wife of former US defense secretary William Cohen, who had been heading to the museum’s theater for final rehearsals ahead of Wednesday night’s premiere when the attack happened.

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