Tag Archives: survivor

“Shocking” genetic data suggest Ebola lurked in survivor for 5-6 years

Enlarge / A staff member of the N’zerekore hospital lifts his shirt sleeve as he prepares to get his anti-ebola vaccination in N’zerekore on February 24, 2021. Nzerekore Hospital was where the first cases of Ebola were found at the end of January 2021.

The Ebola viruses behind a new outbreak in Guinea are stunningly similar to viruses identified during the massive West Africa outbreak that spanned 2013 to 2016, according to a new genetic analysis. The finding suggests that virus may have silently persisted in a survivor for at least five years and that the current outbreak was sparked by that unlucky person, rather than a spillover from an animal reservoir.

In the genetic analysis posted online Friday, a group of international researchers report that Ebola viruses collected from the current outbreak in Guinea have only a dozen or so genetic differences from Ebola variants collected from the same area of Guinea in 2014. Based on what researchers know about the pace at which Ebola collects such genetic substitutions—its evolutionary rate—that number of accumulated differences should have totaled over 110 in that timespan, not 12.

“This number of substitutions is far less than what would be expected during sustained human-to-human transmission,” they researchers write in their analysis. Instead, they note such a sluggish evolutionary rate is a “hallmark of persistent infections.”

“Therefore, the index case of the 2021 Guinea cluster was likely infected from a persistent source, such as via sexual transmission from an [Ebola] survivor,” they conclude.

The Ebola virus is known to persist in some survivors, particularly in places where it can lay low from the immune system, such as the testicles or eyeballs. A 2016 study reported resurgence of the virus in a survivor’s seminal fluid more than 500 days after the initial infection.

Still, the more than five-year span was “shocking” to many virologists and public health experts. And it raises a variety of concerns for the many survivors of past outbreaks, some of whom may have had mild cases of Ebola without realizing it. In particular, many people known to have survived Ebola face stigmatization, and the possibility of years-long persistence is likely to amplify that problem.

In the 2013-2016 West Africa outbreak, more than 28,000 people were infected with the virus, and over 11,000 died. It is the largest Ebola outbreak in history. Most of the cases and deaths were in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. The outbreak began with a case reported in an 18-month old boy in December 2013; the boy is believed to have caught the virus from bats.

The current outbreak, which was declared February 14, has sickened at least 18 and killed nine.  Vaccination efforts are now underway to stop the spread of the virus.



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Fukushima tsunami 2011: Survivor clung to a tree for hours to escape death in Japan’s worst natural disaster

“I felt like the ocean was all around me. The water was so cold it chilled me to the bone,” he recalls.

As the water came up to his knees, Kurosawa saw people in cars gripping their steering wheels as their vehicles were washed down the road. Others who had been hanging on to trees felled by the waves were swept away. For hours, Kurosawa endured sub-zero temperatures. He thought of his wife — he’d reached her on her cellphone for 15 seconds while in the tree, before the line went dead.

As night turned to day, he heard someone in the distance calling for help with what seemed like their last ounce of energy. He says he doesn’t know that person’s fate — but Kurosawa had just survived the deadliest natural disaster in Japanese history.

More than 20,000 people died or went missing in the earthquake and subsequent tsunami. But the devastation went deeper than natural disaster. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, in this part of Japan, became a catastrophe of its own.

Within 50 minutes of the first quake, the tsunami waves crested a 10-meter (33 feet) sea wall intended to protect the nuclear plant. As the water swept in, cooling mechanisms failed, melting fuel in three reactors and spewing deadly radioactive particles into the surrounding area, which have since dispersed and decayed to less-dangerous levels.

This year, ceremonies to mark the disaster’s tenth anniversary will low key and socially distanced amid the coronavirus pandemic. In Tokyo, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako will attend a memorial, pausing for a moment of silence at 2:46 p.m., the exact time the earthquake struck 10 years ago.

Despite the destruction wrought, many survivors have rebuilt their lives and communities, but for many the legacy of the disaster will forever remain.

A tsunami’s power

Ishinomaki, the second largest city in Miyagi prefecture, was one of the worst-hit communities by the tsunami. Waves covered almost 5 square kilometers (500 hectares) of land and inundated nearly 15% of the city, according to the International Tsunami Information Center.

The tsunami destroyed more than 50,000 homes and buildings in Ishinomaki alone, obliterating a vibrant city center and most of its seaport and infrastructure. Nearly 3,100 people in the city lost their lives.

Kurosawa, a plumber, was working in a neighboring town 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) from his city when the earthquake struck. He called his wife, who was sheltering in a bank, and told her to meet him at their home.

Minutes later, a tsunami warning was issued. He tried calling his wife again, but the phone lines were dead. Worried for her safety, Kurosawa jumped into his car and sped home to meet her so they could head to higher ground together. Cars raced past him in the opposite direction, making their way to established evacuation zones in the earthquake-prone country.

As he neared his home, he spotted what looked like tsunami barriers in the distance. When he got closer, he realized they were cars — swept away by waves, bobbing up and down.

As he made a desperate U-turn, he glimpsed a man trying to escape the incoming water on foot. “I pulled him into the car through the window, and we sped away from the water. But by then, the tsunami was ahead of us, too,” Kurosawa says.

Soon sandwiched by the waves, the pair ditched the car and ran to find shelter.

As Kurosawa scrambled up the tree, a branch broke, and he fell onto the embankment. Kurosawa hoisted himself back up the tree just as the waves swept in. The man he’d rescued did the same. “I almost thought I wouldn’t make it,” he says.

“It’s hard to imagine the power of a tsunami unless you’ve experienced it — it’s a destructive force that just swallows everything up and obliterates everything in its path.”

Nuclear disaster

As the tsunami swept further inland to neighboring Fukushima prefecture, the Daiichi nuclear plant was melting down.

Japan declared a nuclear emergency on March 11, 2011 for what became the worst such disaster since the 1986 Chernobyl incident. More than 300,000 people living near the Daiichi nuclear plant were forced to temporarily evacuate, according to the Red Cross. Another 50,000 people moved out of the irradiated areas voluntarily.

In the following months and years, parts of the area around Fukushima became ghost towns, visited only by Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) officials, safety inspectors and tourists seeking a dark thrill. Since the disaster, TEPCO has been pumping hundreds of tons of water into the nuclear plant to cool the reactors and stop the outflow of radiation.

The cleanup from the disaster is expected to take decades and cost billions of dollars. More than 35,000 people remain displaced, 10 years after the original meltdown, according to the Fukushima authorities.

Hajime Matsukubo, a spokesperson from the Citizens’ Nuclear Information Center in Tokyo, an anti-nuclear public interest organization, says the regions hit by the earthquake and tsunami have mostly recovered. However, the recovery work around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has remained at a standstill since the meltdown, as despite the large amount of money spent, the population around the area has halved since 2010. “After 10 years, what we have learned is that once a nuclear accident occurs, the cleanup is tremendously difficult,” he said.

Currently, TEPCO is storing over a million metric tons of water used to cool the reactors in huge tanks at the plant. But storage space is fast running out and authorities, including the country’s environment minister, have indicated the only solution is to release it into the ocean — a plan facing opposition from environmental campaigners and fishing industry representatives.
In 2014, the Japanese government began lifting evacuation orders for zones with annual doses of radiation below 20 millisieverts — the maximum exposure recommended by international safety watchdogs, and the equivalent of two full-body CT scans.

As of March 2020, only 2.4% of the prefecture remains off-limits to residents, with even parts of that area accessible for short visits, according to Japan’s Ministry of Environment.

However, despite the decontamination efforts, a 2020 survey conducted by Kwansei Gakuin University found 65% of evacuees no longer wanted to return to Fukushima prefecture — 46% said they feared residual contamination of the environment and 45% said they had settled elsewhere.

Fukushima also shook Japan’s long-stated commitment to nuclear power. Prior to the disaster, the country’s 50 or so reactors provided more than 30% of its power, according to the World Nuclear Association, an industry body.

This ended on May 5, 2012, when the country’s last operating reactor, in Hokkaido, shut down for inspection, leaving Japan without nuclear power for the first time in more than 45 years. (Two units of the Oi nuclear power plant were briefly restarted in 2012, but went offline again a year later.)

Following the nuclear meltdown, countries such as Germany vowed to shutter all nuclear reactors by 2022. But 10 years later, experts in Japan are divided on the use of the technology, which is better for the environment than burning fossil fuels, while the public’s anti-nuclear stance has slowly waned.
In August 2015, a reactor was restarted in Sendai, in Kagoshima Prefecture, on the southern island of Kyushu.

Passage of time

On the morning of May 12, Kurosawa climbed out of the pine tree. It looked like a bomb had wrecked his city.

As he made his way home, he waded through the debris, dodging parts of wrecked boats that had washed ashore. Half-collapsed buildings were submerged in water, and he struggled to breathe the smoke-laden air.

Kurosawa’s wife was alive, having been evacuated to a school on higher ground. But overnight, they’d lost the friends and physical markers that made up their lives.

For the next six months, Kurosawa and his wife lived in rented homes and their friends’ offices. In August 2011, they moved into temporary disaster housing, a prefabricated building they called home for over three years. Kurosawa put his plumbing skills to use, volunteering to help his local community with odd jobs. He still lives in Ishinomaki.

“I went from having a normal routine to having an abnormal one that became the new norm. One year, two years passed — the abnormal reality returned to normal,” says Kurosawa. For five years, he had dreams at night of walking through the wreckage of his hometown.

Today in Ishinomaki, Kurosawa says people’s feelings toward nuclear power in the region remain just as mixed as each person’s experience of the tenth anniversary of the disaster.

“People ask me how I feel now it’s been 10 years. I still feel like I’m living on that extended timeline and trying my best,” he says.

Over the years, Kurosawa has fought to rebuild his life, business and community. Today, coastal embankments close to 10 meters (33 feet) in height extend for about 56 kilometers (34 miles) along the coast to protect his city from the ocean. New public residences have sprung up on the city’s outskirts, while others are still being rebuilt.

Kurosawa says people’s emotional scars take just as much time to heal as their built environment. But, he says, there is no point living in the past. Today, Kurosawa plays an active role in teaching others about disaster preparedness and keeps moving forward.

“One thing I learned from this disaster is that people need to live among each other. I think the hope lies in us,” he says.

Sometimes, he drives past the tree that saved his life. He even tried once to reclimb it.

CNN’s James Griffiths, Angus Watson and Chie Kobayashi contributed to this report from Hong Kong and Tokyo

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Childhood bone cancer survivor joins private Inspiration4 spaceflight on SpaceX rocket

A 29-year-old survivor of childhood bone cancer may become one of the youngest people to fly in space when she launches on a private trip aboard a SpaceX rocket.

Hayley Arceneaux, a physician’s assistant at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, will join the private Inspiration4 spaceflight led by billionaire Jared Isaacman, which will launch on a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule later this year. Arceneaux’s selection as the “Hope” member of the crew was unveiled today on the Today Show on NBC.  

The invitation to join Isaacman’s Inspiration4 crew came through St. Jude, Arceneaux’s former treatment center.

“It came out of the blue,” Arceneaux said of the invitation from St. Jude. “Basically, they asked if I wanted to go to space. Immediately, I said, ‘Yes, yes! Put my name down.'”

Hayley Arceneaux, a 29-year-old survivor of childhood bone cancer, will join the private Inspiration4 SpaceX mission led by Jared Isaacman. (Image credit: Inspiration4)

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Arceneaux received her treatment in 2002 (when she was 10 years old) and will become the first person with a prosthetic body part to go to space, according to the New York Times, as she received metal rods to replace parts of bones in her left leg. 

Her flight represents a new opportunity to fly diverse populations into space, as NASA’s normal astronaut requirements exclude people with such disabilities. Private flights such as this SpaceX one, however, may open the door to people who could not normally qualify for government flight opportunities.

The Inspiration4 flight will be commanded by Isaacman, a pilot and the billionaire founder of the payment processing company Shift4Payments. The mission is expected to launch this fall, SpaceX has said. 

Isaacman will donate the other three seats; Arceneaux is the first of those announced. A third seat will go to a contributor to St. Jude fundraising in a contest, and a fourth will come from the winner of an entrepreneur competition sponsored by Isaacman’s Shift4Shop. 

You can find out how to enter both contests at the Inspiration4 website here.

Arceneaux continues to help patients today at the hospital as a physician’s assistant. She said the positive attitude she cultivated during the difficult parts of treatment will probably help her face the challenges of spaceflight, too.

“I really hope to show [childhood cancer patients] that the sky is not even the limit,” Arceneaux  said. “They can do anything. I never thought I’d be able to go to space. Really until this mission, you really had to be physically perfect. This mission is changing things. Getting to be a cancer survivor in space is such an incredible honor.”

As things stand, Arceneaux will be the youngest American to fly in space — beating the first American woman in space, Sally Ride, by two years. (Ride was 31 when she first flew in 1983.) Soviet Union cosmonaut Gherman Titov holds the record for youngest space traveler, having flown a month shy of 26 years old when he launched aboard the Soviet spacecraft Vostok 2 in August 1961.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 

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Bone cancer survivor to participate in first SpaceX private flight | SpaceX

Hayley Arceneaux, a 29-year-old physician’s assistant and former bone cancer patient, will become the youngest American in space later this year, when she participates in the first SpaceX private flight.

St Jude Children’s Research hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, where Arceneaux was once a patient and now works, announced on Monday that she will blast off later this year with the entrepreneur Jared Isaacman and two contest winners.

Arcenaux will be the first person with a prosthesis in space. When she was 10, she had surgery at St Jude to replace her knee and get a titanium rod in her left thigh. She still limps and suffers leg pain but has been cleared for flight by SpaceX. She’ll serve as the crew’s medical officer.

“My battle with cancer really prepared me for space travel,” Arceneaux said. “It made me tough, and then also I think it really taught me to expect the unexpected and go along for the ride.”

She wants to show her young patients and other cancer survivors that “the sky is not even the limit anymore”.

“It’s going to mean so much to these kids to see a survivor in space,” she said.

Isaacman announced his space mission on 1 February, pledging to raise $200m for St Jude, half his own contribution. As the flight’s self-appointed commander, he offered one of the four SpaceX Dragon capsule seats to St Jude.

Without alerting staff, St Jude chose Arceneaux from among the “scores” of hospital and fundraising employees who had once been patients and could represent the next generation, said Rick Shadyac, president of St Jude’s fundraising organization.

Arceneaux was at home in Memphis when she got the “out of the blue” call in January asking if she’d represent St Jude in space. Her immediate response: “Yes! Yes! Please!”

But first she wanted to run it past her mother in St Francisville, Louisiana. Next she reached out to her brother and sister-in-law, both aerospace engineers in Huntsville, Alabama, who “reassured me how safe space travel is”.

A lifelong space fan, Arceneaux insists those who know her won’t be surprised by her new role. She’s plunged on a bungee swing in New Zealand and ridden camels in Morocco. And she loves roller coasters. Isaacman, who flies fighter jets for a hobby, considers her a perfect fit.

“It’s not all supposed to be about getting people excited to be astronauts someday, which is certainly cool,” said Isaacman, 38. “It’s also supposed to be about an inspiring message of what we can accomplish here on Earth.”

He has two more crew members to select and plans to reveal them in March. One will be a sweepstakes winner; anyone donating to St Jude this month is eligible. So far, more than $9m has come in, according to Shadyac. The other seat will go to a business owner who uses Shift4Payments, Isaacman’s Allentown, Pennsylvania, credit card-processing company.

Liftoff is targeted around October at Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center, with the capsule orbiting Earth two to four days. Isaacman is not divulging how much the flight will cost him.

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Left 4 Dead Wiki Desecrated To Add Fifth Survivor, Who Is Now Canon, That’s The Rules

Image: Left 4 Dead Wiki

In the original Left 4 Dead, there were four survivors: Francis, Bill, Louis and Zoey. Anyone reading through the game’s wiki, however, will think there’s actually a fifth cast member: Purple Francis.

As some digging from @thinkiamsad turned up over the weekend, user Lucythorkelson logged onto the wiki on February 12 and went to town, creating the character (complete with his own bio) then going to the trouble of scouring the rest of the pages and dropping casual mentions of him alongside other survivors to make it look like he had always been there.

In the elevator, Zoey asks Purple Francis if he likes monster movies, to which Purple Francis says that they aren’t that good. Zoey, upon hearing this, mumbles to herself and looks away angrily. When Zoey dies, Purple Francis is less saddened by her death, stating that “she’s the type to hold grudges”, referencing her decreasing liking to Purple Francis after his comment on monster movies. Fans see this as a prediction to Zoey’s dislike towards Bill’s actions in The Sacrifice comic, yet Valve has stated that it was simply a coincidence. When Purple Francis dies, Zoey states that he was a great man, and regrets acting badly towards him due to what he said on monster movies.

Defacing a wiki is usually a tedious pain in the ass, but I can get behind it when it transcends to this level of universe-building.



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AOC reveals she’s a sexual assault survivor

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Monday revealed that she is a survivor of sexual assault.

The 31-year-old Democrat, speaking to more than 100,000 people on Instagram Live, described what she went through during the Capitol riot and addressed suggestions from some Republicans that Americans “move on” from the Jan. 6 attack.

“The reason I’m getting emotional in this moment is because these folks who tell us to move on… these are the same tactics of abusers,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

“And I’m a survivor of sexual assault,” she continued, her voice breaking. “I haven’t told many people that in my life.”

The congresswoman went on to tell the more than 130,000 viewers that no matter what kind of abuse or neglect they have experienced, “trauma compounds on each other.”

“There’s no, something really big happens to you and then you deal with it and you move on, and then when something else happens to you, you deal with that,” she said.

She didn’t immediately add anything else about the assault.

Ocasio-Cortez later detailed frightening experiences during the siege, including how a man she believed to be a rioter broke into her congressional office as she hid in the bathroom.

She recalled hearing him yell “Where is she? Where is she?”

“This was the moment where I thought everything was over,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

“I thought I was going to die,” she said. “I have never been quieter in my entire life.”

Her legislative director later told her to come out, explaining the man was a Capitol police officer.

Ocasio-Cortez also addressed calls for her to apologize after tweeting that Sen. Ted Cruz “almost had me murdered” during the riot.

“Some of the representatives who actually encouraged people to threaten members of Congress … are actually asking me to apologize for saying and speaking truth to what happened.”

“These are the tactics that abusers use,” she said. “And how I feel is, not again.

“I’m not going to let it happen to me again… and I’m not going to let it happen to our country.”

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Israeli coronavirus survivor gets reinfected with South African variant

Ziv Yaffe has tested positive for COVID-19 twice, after originally testing positive for the virus last August. However, with this new South African strain, Yaffe said that he does not experience any symptoms, stating that he “feels great and did not infect anyone else,” according to a report by Ynet. Yaffe, 57, tested positive for the new strain after returning to Israel from Turkey. He said that it was more difficult for him to deal with the virus when he had it last August. “I am neither a doctor nor a researcher, but I can say that personally, the first time I was indeed very ill,” he said in the report.A possible explanation for not having any symptoms this time may be due to “antibodies from the original virus that protected against the disease when infected with the strain,” according to Prof. Shai Efrati.  Yaffe is currently participating in a study conducted by Efrati where he evaluates people’s immune system after recovering from coronavirus. “Since then we have been following him, and over time we have seen that with everyone, the antibodies go down – but we do not know if this is enough to prevent another disease. It should be emphasized that antibodies do not necessarily prevent infection,” Efrati added in the report.In his re-examination upon his return from Turkey, Yaffe was confirmed to have the South African strain. “He had the virus, but he wasn’t sick,” Efrati said. “His wife, daughters and grandchildren also lived with him – but none of them were infected.”

According to Efrati: “This is a case from which a lot can be learned. The antibodies he developed in August protected him from developing a disease,” he told Ynet. “This means that the antibodies that developed from the original virus he had provided protection against disease even when infected with the South African mutation.”As a result of increasing coronavirus cases, the Israeli government agreed to extend the current lockdown until Friday morning and the Knesset passed a bill which doubles the fine for violations of coronavirus regulations.



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Jimmy Kimmel Unloads on QAnon Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene for Harassing Parkland Survivor

On Thursday night, Jimmy Kimmel moved away from his favorite target, the coup-complicit congressman Ted Cruz, and toward the Q-complicit Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican congresswoman from Georgia who subscribes to QAnon—a baseless, batshit-insane conspiracy theory positing that Donald Trump is a messianic figure battling a cabal of sex-trafficker pedophiles comprised of some of the biggest names in Hollywood and the Democratic Party (this despite the fact that Trump palled around with notorious pedophile Jeffrey Epstein).

“The chair of the RNC, Ronna McDaniel…tried to distance the party from QAnon. She said it’s beyond fringe and dangerous,” explained Kimmel during his late-night monologue. “QAnon is so fringe, in fact, Republicans in the House just put their screwiest, Q-iest member on the Education and Labor Committee—that is Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia.”

Then, Kimmel introduced his audience to Greene, who has never met a bonkers conspiracy theory she didn’t love.

“If you don’t know who this person is, I wish I didn’t too. She is the lady who, among other things, called for Nancy Pelosi’s execution; called for Joe Biden’s impeachment on his first day in office; and she believes our former governor here in California, Jerry Brown, used space lasers to set the wildfires here. She saw the Austin Powers movie and thought it was a documentary, I guess,” cracked Kimmel.

Greene is also a COVID skeptic who refused to wear a mask in a secure, tightly-packed room with other congresspeople during the storming of the U.S. Capitol; believes in Pizzagate, the debunked theory that Democrats were operating a child sex-trafficking ring under a D.C. pizza shop; said the elections of Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib to Congress represented an “Islamic invasion of our government”; called the neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville an “inside job”; pushed the anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that “Zionist supremacists” are trying to replace whites with migrants; has repeatedly questioned the 9/11 attacks; and called the Christchurch, Sandy Hook, and Parkland shootings “false flags.” And again, she supported executing Democratic leaders.

“Marjorie also called some of the terrible school shootings ‘false flag operations,’ meaning the perpetrators weren’t who we think they were,” offered Kimmel. “And here she is stalking and harassing a child not long after he watched his friends get slaughtered in school.”

He then threw to a video of Greene trailing David Hogg, a Parkland school shooting survivor (and teenager), barking at him and branding him a “coward.”

“The coward she was yelling at there is a teenager named David Hogg. He’s an activist. She referred to him online as ‘Little Hitler.’ I wonder how it would go over with the Fox News and Ted Cruz crew if Nancy Pelosi called for Marjorie Taylor Greene to be executed and called a teenage kid Hitler? You think they’d have anything to say?” asked Kimmel. “Well, it was the other way around, and guess what? Most of them have nothing to say. Instead, they assigned her to the education committee—hoping she would get one? I don’t know.”

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92-year-old Holocaust survivor says white supremacist imagery during Capitol riot “gave me taste of the past”

On International Holocaust Remembrance Day, this 92-year-old survivor said it’s a special, but somber occasion for him. 

“It’s kind of a celebration and the fact that those of those of us who did survive were able to make a pretty nice life for themselves and continue,” Ben Lesser told CBS News in a Zoom video call on Wednesday. 

“But of course, we can’t forget our dear departed ones,” he said.

Wednesday marked 76 years after the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp. Lesser was familiar with the atrocities there.

He said that he survived the work and death camps in Auschwitz-Birkenau and Dachau, Poland, two death marches and the infamous Dachau death train — where dozens of train cars carried the corpses of thousands of prisoners to Dachau near the end of World War II. Lesser is believed to be the last known survivor of the latter.

Ben Lasser seen in a Zoom call with CBS News.

During the attack at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, some rioters were wearing “Camp Auschwitz” sweatshirts and holding up white supremacist signs. 

“It gave me a taste of the past when I was a young boy,” he told CBS News, in reflecting on the Capitol assault.  

The recent images — combined with years of rising anti-Semitic attacks — doesn’t make Lesser “happy with the current state of events.” However, Lesser, who is the founder of the Zachor Holocaust Remembrance Foundation, has been dedicating his time on helping future generations understand the extent of the Holocaust as a way to combat hate. He often gives talks in Germany and even developed a curriculum for schools.

“I tell the people that education is very important, because only if you’re really knowledgeable, can you realize that we’re all the same,” he said. “They’re all part of humanity. God created all of us. So, why can’t we live side by side and appreciate our differences, rather than hate them?”

“Hitler and the Nazis did not start with killing,” he said. “It all started with hate.”


Anti-Semitism on display in Capitol riot

20:09

A survey unveiled in 2020 showed more than 60% of millennial and Gen Z respondents didn’t know that 6 million Jews were killed during the Holocaust. Even though Lesser acknowledged there may always be anti-Semitism in the U.S., he said his biggest concern is “what’s going to happen after the survivors are gone?”

“Who is going to speak up and teach these children to let them know the future generations that there was a Holocaust and how it happened and how bad it was,” he said. 

“When I see that, when most many kids don’t even know what the word Holocaust means, that bothers me,” he said. “And that has to change. So, we’re doing our best to try to change that.”

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