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Minnesota Holocaust survivor pushes for genocide curriculum for middle and high school students

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Dora Zaidenweber has been telling her story most of her life, and she’s used to the effect it can have on people.

People reacted with shock when she arrived in the United States with her family in 1950 as a young woman who survived six months in the Auschwitz death camp, where she could smell the bodies burning. She saw people’s disbelief as she strived for the education she was deprived of for so many years working in forced labor camps.

“People were not quite believing that this could have happened to us,” Zaidenweber said. “And they certainly didn’t believe that it could happen here.”

After a lifetime of educating people about the Holocaust, she pleaded with Minnesota legislators Wednesday to pass a proposal requiring schools to offer Holocaust and genocide education in middle and high school social studies curriculum. She doesn’t want the next generation to react to those atrocities with disbelief.

“Mass murders can happen, and people have to understand to learn to live with each other,” said Zaidenweber, now 99 years old. “It is only through understanding and education that they know who their neighbors are, who the people they are living with and learn to live with.”

The proposal also includes a requirement to teach about other genocides, including of Indigenous people, which would be the first time that’s been addressed in Minnesota statute. The bill would make Minnesota the 23rd state to require some form of Holocaust and genocide education.

The issue is personal for Rep. Frank Hornstein, DFL-Minneapolis, the sponsor of the bill and the child of two Holocaust survivors. During the hearing, Hornstein lifted up a thick black book that he wrote as a student at Macalester College chronicling his family’s experiences.

All his grandparents died during the Holocaust. His parents met on a train heading to a displaced persons camp.

“These stories are so critical and why this bill is especially important now,” he said. “Many of our survivors are older and we need to make sure many of our stories are preserved for future generations.”

The bill proposes creating a task force that would develop the resources necessary to implement the new requirements, as well as provide funding for professional training to help teachers prepare to teach the curriculum. The task force is required to report recommendations to the Legislature by November 2025.

Most educators want to teach about the Holocaust and genocide, but they lack the resources to do so, said Joe Eggers, interim director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota.

Wayzata High School freshman Max Walstien said he wrote a research paper on the Holocaust in sixth grade, inspired to dig deeper by his own Jewish background. But what he was taught in school was limited, and he was concerned by the lack of understanding from his fellow students about the horrors of the Holocaust, which saw Nazi Germany and allies systematically murder 6 million Jews.

“The Holocaust is one of the most denied events in history, and that denial goes on to fuel anti-Semitism,” he said.

The bill was approved by the House Education Policy Committee on Wednesday and unanimously passed through a Senate committee last Monday.

As the hearing on the bill ended, Hornstein leaned over to Zaidenweber and said, “l’dor v’dor,” a Hebrew phrase meaning “from generation to generation.”

Staff photographer Aaron Lavinsky contributed reporting to this story.



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Lynx lose WNBA Finals Game 3 against New York Liberty: Social media reacts

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The Lynx are in the hot seat.

The team lost Game 3 of the WNBA Finals series against the New York Liberty on Wednesday night 77-80, setting the stage for a decisive match at Target Center on Friday night. Fans in the arena reacted with resounding disappointment after Sabrina Ionescu sunk a three-pointer to break away from the tie game and dashed the Lynx’s chance at forcing overtime.

Before we get to the reactions, first things first: The Lynx set an attendance record, filling Target Center with 19,521 spectators for the first time in franchise history. That’s nearly 500 more than when Caitlin Clark was in town with the Indiana Fever earlier this year.

Despite leading by double digits for much of the game, the Lynx began the fourth quarter with a one-point lead over the Liberty and struggled to stay more than two or three points ahead throughout.

The Liberty took the lead with minutes to go in the fourth quarter and folks were practically despondent.

Of course, there were people who were in it solely for the spectacle. Nothing more.

The Lynx took a commanding lead early in the first quarter and ended the first half in winning position, setting a particularly jovial mood among the fanbase to start the game.

Inside Target Center, arena announcers spent a few minutes before the game harassing Lynx fans — and Liberty fans — who had not yet donned the complementary T-shirts draped over every seat.



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Bong Bridge will get upgrades before Blatnik reroutes

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DULUTH – The Minnesota and Wisconsin transportation departments will make upgrades to the Richard I. Bong Memorial Bridge in the summer of 2025, in preparation for the structure to become the premiere route between this city and Superior during reconstruction of the Blatnik Bridge.

Built in 1961, the Blatnik Bridge carries 33,000 vehicles per day along Interstate 535 and Hwy. 53. It will be entirely rebuilt, starting in 2027, with the help of $1 billion in federal funding announced earlier this year. MnDOT and WisDOT are splitting the remaining costs of the project, about $4 million each.

According to MnDOT, projects on the Bong Bridge will include spot painting, concrete surface repairs to the bridge abutments, concrete sealer on the deck, replacing rubber strip seal membranes on the main span’s joints and replacing light poles on the bridge and its points of entry. It’s expected to take two months, transportation officials said during a recent meeting at the Superior Public Library.

During this time there will be occasional lane closures, detours at the off-ramps, and for about three weeks the sidewalk path alongside the bridge will be closed.

The Bong Bridge, which crosses the St. Louis River, opened to traffic in 1985 and is the lesser-used of the two bridges. Officials said they want to keep maintenance to a minimum on the span during the Blatnik project, which is expected to take four years.



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Red Wing Pickleball fans celebrate opening permanent courts

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Red Wing will celebrate the grand opening of its first permanent set of pickleball courts next week with an “inaugural play” on the six courts at Colvill Park on the banks of the Mississippi, between a couple of marinas and next to the aquatic center.

Among the first to get to play on the new courts will be David Anderson, who brought pickleball to the local YMCA in 2008, before the nationwide pickleball craze took hold, and Denny Yecke, at 92 the oldest pickleball player in Red Wing.

The inaugural play begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday, with a rain date of the next day. Afterward will be food and celebration at the Colvill Park Courtyard building.

Tim Sletten, the city’s former police chief, discovered America’s fastest-growing sport a decade ago after he retired. With fellow members of the Red Wing Pickleball Group, he’d play indoors at the local YMCA or outdoors at a local school, on courts made for other sports. But they didn’t have a permanent place, so they approached the city about building one.

When a city feasibility study came up with a high cost, about $350,000, Sletten’s group got together to raise money.

The courts are even opening ahead of schedule, originally set for 2025.



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