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Jan. 17 International Holocaust Remembrance Day Program Features Holocaust Survivor Robert Herschkowitz

Lecture asks “should the Allies have bombed Auschwitz?”

SEATTLE – On Jan. 17, The Museum of Flight in conjunction with the Washington State Holocaust Education Resource Center (WSHERC), presents an evening lecture about one of the most provocative questions of World War II: “Should the Allies have bombed Auschwitz?” After wide-ranging debate, the Allies chose not to bomb the huge Auschwitz complex or the railroad networks that headed there, despite the known fact the Nazis were deporting Jews to Auschwitz by the tens of thousands. The featured speaker at the Museum event will be Robert Herschkowitz, a Holocaust survivor from Belgium. The program is from 6:30 to 9 p.m. and is free.

Bob Herschkowitz and his family fled to France when he was a young child. His father escaped a French concentration camp and the family crossed the Alps by foot, finding refuge in Switzerland in 1943. Herschkowitz is a retired Naval commander, a Boeing Engineer, served as the President of the Board of the WSHERC, and is currently a member of the WSHERC speakers bureau. Some of the material discussed in the Museum program can be found in “The Bombing of Auschwitz,” edited by Michael J. Neufeld and Michael Berenbaum, published by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

The Museum of Flight is located at 9404 E. Marginal Way S., Seattle, Exit 158 off Interstate 5 on Boeing Field half-way between downtown Seattle and Sea-Tac Airport. The Museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $18 for adults, $14 for seniors 65 and older, $13 for active military, $9 for youth 5 to 17, and free for children under 5. Group rates are available. Admission on the first Thursday of the month is free from 5 to 9 p.m. courtesy of Wells Fargo. McCormick & Schmick’s Wings Café is on site. For general Museum information, please call 206-764-5720 or visit www.museumofflight.org