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K01072 Summary:

BILL NOK01072
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORLawler
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSRAngelino, Brabenec, Brown E, Brown K, DeStefano, Durso, Englebright, Fitzpatrick, Giglio JA, Hawley, Jensen, Paulin, Salka, Simpson, Tague, Walsh
 
 
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K01072 Text:

 
Assembly Resolution No. 1072
 
BY: M. of A. Lawler
 
        RECOGNIZING  the  contributions  of  the  Rockland
        County Holocaust Museum and Center for Tolerance and
        Education in working to End Jew Hate
 
  WHEREAS, Individuals and  organizations  devoted  to  improving  the
quality  of life for others, enabling them to build lives of dignity and
self-worth are deserving of the highest praise and recognition; and
 
  WHEREAS, This Legislative Body is  justly  proud  to  recognize  the
contributions  of  the  Rockland  County Holocaust Museum and Center for
Tolerance and Education in working to End Jew Hate; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  Rockland  County  Holocaust  Museum  and  Center  for
Tolerance and Education is an institution dedicated to educating all who
wish  to  learn  about  the  Holocaust, genocide, and grave human rights
violations in order to promote understanding of causes and consequences,
thereby enabling the foresight necessary to prevent similar recurrences;
and
 
  WHEREAS, The idea of a permanent Holocaust  Museum  and  Center  for
Tolerance  and  Education  originated with the Rockland County Holocaust
Commission, which was appointed by the County  Legislature  on  May  15,
1979; and
 
  WHEREAS, In 1981, the Finkelstein Memorial Library granted space for
a  home  to the newly formed Holocaust Museum and Study Center in Spring
Valley, New York; and
 
  WHEREAS, Since its inception,  the  museum  has  been  an  important
cultural  and  educational  center  for  the  region;  as  the community
continued to  grow  and  educational  needs  changed,  the  organization
adopted  a  new  name: the Holocaust Museum and Center for Tolerance and
Education; and
 
  WHEREAS,  During  this  time,  museum  stakeholders  identified   an
increasing  need  for Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights education on
the campus of Rockland Community College (RCC);  subsequently,  in  2015
the museum closed its doors in Spring Valley and moved to the RCC campus
in Suffern, New York; and
 
  WHEREAS,   Remaining  true  to  its  mission,  the  Rockland  County
Holocaust Museum  and  Center  for  Tolerance  and  Education  educates,
through  the lens of the Holocaust, about the dangers of intolerance, to
invoke critical thinking, and to inspire moral courage in  the  face  of
injustice; and
 
  WHEREAS,   Furthermore,   this   vital  institution  facilitates  an
understanding of the universal nature of human dignity and the  critical
importance to respect and defend it; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Working collaboratively with individuals and organizations
who share its commitment to justice for all people, the Rockland  County
Holocaust  Museum  and  Center  for  Tolerance  and Education serves and
 
builds  its  community  through  quality  educational  programming   and
commemoration events; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  Rockland  County  Holocaust  Museum  and  Center  for
Tolerance and Education also confronts acts of  ignorance,  hatred,  and
injustice  by  serving  as  a  model of community engagement directed by
informed, rational understanding; and
 
  WHEREAS, The Holocaust Museum and Center for Tolerance and Education
is proud to be a part of the EndJewHatred movement, a  grassroots  civil
rights  movement  engaged in peaceful direct action to end Jew hatred in
this generation; and
 
  WHEREAS, In an effort to advance the  goals  of  the  movement,  the
museum set up an End Jew Hatred Task Force which will focus on educating
about  the  endemic  nature of Jew-hatred and how the Holocaust is still
relevant  today,  as  well  as  unpacking  the  inherited  trauma   Jews
experience  while  teaching  them  how to shed the fears of the past and
embrace a more confident future without Jew-hatred; and
 
  WHEREAS, The combination of decentralizing communications technology
and rising civil rights activism have created a unique  opportunity  for
Jews to advocate for full liberation from bigotry and oppression; and
 
  WHEREAS,   We   learn   in  the  aftermath  of  the  Holocaust  that
indifference to genocide  cannot  be  tolerated;  Holocaust  remembrance
imposes a moral obligation to speak out; and
 
  WHEREAS, The People of the State of New York should remain eternally
vigilant  against  all  tyranny  and  recognize  that bigotry provides a
breeding ground for tyranny to flourish; and
 
  WHEREAS, This Legislative Body representing the people of the  State
of  New York is proud to recognize the vital work of the Rockland County
Holocaust Museum and Center for Tolerance and Education  in  working  to
End  Jew Hate, and its many years of steadfast and unwavering commitment
to  the  victims  of  the  Holocaust,  their  families  and  the  Jewish
community-at-large; now, therefore, be it
 
  RESOLVED,  That  this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
recognize the contributions of the Rockland County Holocaust Museum  and
Center for Tolerance and Education in working to End Jew Hate; and be it
further
 
  RESOLVED,  That  a  copy  of this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to the Rockland  County  Holocaust  Museum  and  Center  for
Tolerance and Education.
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