The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 08, 2018, Image 12
Nick Bowman Features Editor | 770-718-3426 | life@gainesvilletimes.com She (Times gainesvilletimes.com Saturday, December 8, 2018 ‘Teaching the next generations’ HT OF TORAH rii v " l * i’W 0 , i I - tjk « ~m J •• i / *1 j i i ■ Photos by CLEM MURRAY I Tribune News Service Above: Sid Moszer and wife Eva, 88, with a display of torahs at Congregation Brothers of Israel in Newtown. Left: Sidney Moszer in the sanctuary of Congregation Brothers of Israel synagogue in Newtown. At 93, Holocaust survivor Sidney Moszer still teaches lessons from the Torah — and his life BY KRISTIN E. HOLMES Tribune News Service For almost half a century, Jew ish students in Bucks County, Pa., have been learning the intrica cies of chanting the Torah from a man who, when he was their age, was running for his life. When Sidney Moszer was 13, the Cologne synagogue at which he had his bar mitzvah was torched during Kristallnacht, the Nazi pogrom in Germany. Through Kristallnach, which occurred Nov. 9-10,1938, a hun dred Jews were killed. After ward, 30,000 were arrested and sent to concentration camps, their communities destroyed. Moszer and his family fled, and two months later were on a train headed for England. The jour ney would ultimately take him to the United States and bring gen erations of Jewish youth under his tutelage, a calling for which Moszer, now 93, is being honored. During Shabbat services last Saturday, before the start of Hanukkah this week, families at Congregation Brothers of Israel in Newtown, praised Moszer for not only tutoring the synagogue children in Torah recitation for their bar and bat mitzvahs, but also for being an exemplar of survival when all seems lost. “You are teaching them our way of living and how to love who they are,” Joan Hersch, syna gogue education director, told Moszer during an interview. His voice choking, he replied, “That’s why I get so emotional.” “We’ll cry together,” Hersch said. Moszer, a retired aeronauti cal engineer, has been teaching at the Congregation Brothers of Israel for 18 years, and since the 1970s at Congregation Beth El in Yardley, where he is a member. He and his wife, Eva, were wit nesses to the early years of the Holocaust. She was 8 when she and her sister escaped from Ber lin as part of the Kindertransport, rescue of 10,000 children, most of them Jewish, from Europe nine months before World War II began. The sisters lived in Eng land for a decade before immi grating to the U.S. and being reunited with their parents, who had managed to hide out in Ger many during the war. Sid Moszer is one of 25 Holo caust survivors who speak at events throughout the region for the Holocaust Awareness Museum and Education Center at the KleinLif e community cen ter in Northeast Philadelphia. When he talks about his years as a German schoolboy and the deadly chaos that surrounded him, he must pause periodically to rein in his emotions. “You live with this insecurity and uncertain feeling, and that feeling is always in the back of your mind,” he said. It still is, he added. On Nov. 9, 1938, Moszer was living with his mother and three siblings — his father, a Polish Jew, had been expelled, and an older brother was on his own — in an apartment on the edge of a park in Cologne. As the Nazis burned synagogues and vandalized Jew ish homes and busi nesses, the family fled the apartment, waiting in the park for hours until the violence of Kristall nacht ended the next afternoon and they could return. They imme diately began planning to flee Germany. Moszer’s father managed to get back from Poland and the family secured transit visas to Eng land because a rel ative lived there. After 21 months, on Oct. 4,1940, they left for Amer ica — what he calls “the great est day of my life.” The family later moved to Philadelphia. In 1944, Moszer was drafted into the Army and wound up with the infantry in France. At the end of the war, he was assigned to the U.S. Counter Intelligence Corps as an interpreter for agents inter rogating Nazis. He and Eva married in 1954 and had three sons, five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Tutoring the Torah was at first a favor for a friend who was dissatisfied with his son’s bar mitzvah education. Other parents at Congregation Beth El recruited Moszer, and even tually he was pressed into ser vice at Congregation Brothers of Israel. “He taught us about reaching our maximum potential — and instilled in us that it should be our minimum expectation,” said Gregory Segarra, a former student. Moszer teaches each student the section of the Torah, the Haftorah (selections from the biblical books of the prophets) and the blessings that are read in synagogue on the day of the bar or bat mitzvah, and the pre scribed chants for each section’s recitation. His lessons are never cookie- cutter, said Rebecca Wind, 13, of Newtown. “He changes his (approach) to make sure it was the best way for you to learn. He works at your speed.” Lessons are usu ally one-on-one, an hour a week, for six months. He has met with students in syna gogue classrooms, in offices and hall ways. He describes his mission as not only teaching, but also easing fears and instilling confidence. “I talk to them on their level,” he said. “I don’t talk down to them, and I try to connect.” He doesn’t “involve parents” in the lessons, because “that doesn’t work.” In 1999, Moszer attended a reunion of the Kindertransport with his wife in London and the event helped him realize the importance of his mission and the triumph his life represents. “I realized that the ones who wanted us dead are gone, and we are still here,” he said. “And here I am, teaching the next generations.” ‘I realized that the ones who wanted us dead are gone, and we are still here. And here I am, teaching the next generations.’ Sidney Moszer Holocaust survivor Associated Press Firefighters are at the Fasanenstrasse synagogue, Berlin’s biggest house of Jewish worship, after Nazis set fire to it in anti-Jewish demonstrations throughout Germany known as Kristallnacht, Nov. 9,1938. FAITH EVENTS Christmas Lunch. Noon to 3 p.m. Dec. 8. Mount Zion Baptist Church, 4000 Thurmon Tanner Road, Flowery Branch. mzbcinfo@ yahoo.com. Georgia 2018 Christmas Tour. 6 p.m. Dec. 8. Pond Fork Baptist Church, 2615 Pond Fork Church Road, Pendergrass. 706-693-2442. Wishes and Candles. Christmas concert. 7-8:30 p.m. Dec. 8-9. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Sugar Hill Stake), 4833 Suwanee Dam Road, Suwanee. 404-375-7882 or cketchem@ ldspublicaffairs.org. Christmas In Color. Visual artistry, live music and the story of Christmas. 9-10:30 a.m., 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 5-6:30 p.m. Dec. 9. Free Chapel, 3001 McEver Road, Gainesville. 678-677-8300 or alexisramgopal@gmail.com. Christmas Musical. 4-6 p.m. Dec. 9. Mount Zion Baptist Church, 4000 Thurmon Tanner Road, Flowery Branch. mzbcinfo@ yahoo.com. Marriage Enrichment. 9-9:45 a.m. Dec. 9 and Jan. 13. Mount Zion Baptist Church, 4000 Thurmond Tanner Road, Flowery Branch. 770-967-3722 or mzbcinfo@ yahoo.com. Christmas Under The Stars. Uplifting music and after party with Santa, snow, crafts, food and more. 7-8:30 p.m. Dec. 12. Free Chapel, 3001 McEver Road, Gainesville. alexisramgopal@gmail.com. “The Stable, The Star and The Tree.” Community Christmas program. Pizza served after performance. 6:30 p.m. Dec. 12. Mount Carmel Baptist Church, 2405 Ga. 51 S, Lula. 770-503-5469. Christmas Lessons and Carols. 8:45 a.m. Dec. 16. Cumming First United Methodist Church, 770 Canton Highway, Cumming. The LeFevre Quartet. 6 p.m. Dec. 16. Lighthouse Baptist Church, 329 Harmony Church Road, Dawsonville. Red Church Hymnal Singing. 6 p.m. Dec. 16. Mountain View Baptist Church, 3765 Mountain View Road, Gainesville. “Happy Birthday, Jesus” party. Bouncy house, hot cocoa, smores, cake, ice cream and party bags. 7 p.m. Dec. 19. Rock Hill Church, 4115 Price Road, Gainesville. Singles Enrichment/Empowerment. 9-9:45 a.m. Dec. 23, Jan. 27, Feb. 24 and March 24. Mount Zion Baptist Church, 4000 Thurmond Tanner Road, Flowery Branch. mzbcinfo@yahoo.com. Christmas Eve Candlelight Service. 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Dec. 24. Free Chapel, 3001 McEver Road, Gainesville. alexisramgopal@gmail.com. The LeFevre Quartet and Sounds Of Jericho. 7 p.m. Dec. 28. The Venue at Christ Place Church, 3494 Atlanta Highway, Oakwood. Movie Night. 7 p.m. Jan. 26, Feb. 23 and March 30. Chicopee United Methodist Church, 3 First St., Gainesville. 770-634-6803 or pegflute@yahoo.com. Rethinking Retirement. Retreat to encourage and equip elders for the work of discipling the next generation. 9 a.m. Feb. 15 to 10 a.m. Feb. 17. Ark on Lake Lanier, 6250 Old Dawsonville Road, Gainesville. David Marsh, theater organist. 3 p.m. Feb. 17. Cumming First United Methodist Church, 770 Canton Highway, Cumming. Darrell and Dawn Ritchie. Noon Feb. 26. Concord Baptist Church, 6905 Concord Road, Cumming. ONGOING Celebrate Recovery. 6:15-9 p.m. every Friday. Dinner, large group service and small groups. Children’s ministry available for children of all ages. CrossBridge Community Church, 751 Ga. 53 E, Dawsonville. $2-3. 770-883-2576 or slreeves2@yahoo.com. Free clothing store. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. every Tuesday. Infant, children and adult clothing available for those in need. Donations appreciated. Holy Trinity Anglican Church, 7049 Spout Springs Road, Flowery Branch. 678-336-6964. Gentle Hearts Ministry Food Pantry. Distribution of food. 5-6 p.m. every Wednesday. St. Paul United Methodist Church, 705 Summit St., Gainesville. 770-536-4910. Senior adult choir. 1 p.m. Wednesdays. First Presbyterian Church, 800 S. Enota Drive, Gainesville. Membership not required. 770-532-0136.