News Austrian youth honor victims of Holocaust Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By Tom Tugend | April 14, 2000 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. LOS ANGELES — Dominik Zotti, a strapping, blond 20-year- old from Vienna and grandson of a German army veteran, guides visitors through the Holocaust exhibit at the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Reinhard Hannesschlaeger, 24, from northern Austria, works in the computer section of Steven Spielberg's Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation. Both are acutely aware of the international criticism leveled at the Austrian government's extreme-right Freedom Party and hope to show, less by argument than by example, that there is a different side to their native country. Zotti and Hannesschlaeger are interns in the Gedenkdienst, or commemorative service, program, which sends young Austrian volunteers, mostly in their 20s, to Holocaust-related institutions in the United States, Canada and Europe for 14-month-long assignments. Gedenkdienst, founded eight years ago by Austrian political scientist Andreas Maislinger, emphasizes that Austria bears a share of the responsibility for Nazi crimes and the Holocaust. The Austrian government underwrites the program and counts participation as an alternative to the mandatory eight-month military service for young men. Pointing to the 18-month preparatory course and the 14 months of service, Hannesschlaeger and Zotti reject the idea that the Gedenkdienst offers an easy way out of army service. While abroad, interns get a monthly stipend of $600 for all living and personal expenses, which doesn't go very far in Los Angeles. They supplement the stipend with parental support or their own savings, while the host institutions get their services free. Gedenkdienst receives some 300 to 500 applications a year, but the majority drop out during the preparatory phase and only one in 10 gets to go abroad. "It takes a lot of personal and psychological preparation to stay the course," says Zotti, who is Catholic. "It's not the easy way out." Appraising his motivation, he says, "Somehow, I always had a strong interest in the Holocaust." He says he talked about it with his grandfather, who was in the German army, and learned about it during high school from classes and several visits to the Mauthausen concentration camp. Zotti, who as a tour guide meets the general public more than Hannesschlaeger does, says he enjoys his job and, despite his Germanic appearance and accent, has had no hostile reactions. He has been invited to give talks at high schools and has savored the "unique experience" of a family Shabbat dinner. Hannesschlaeger is a Jehovah's Witness, as are his mother and his four siblings. He grew up with stories of the Nazi persecutions of his faith. Of 20,000 to 25,000 Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany during the Holocaust, he says 6,000 to 7,000 were imprisoned, 2,000 to 2,500 were shipped to concentration camps and more than 500 were killed, including 260 executed for refusing military service. In his work at the Shoah Foundation, Hannesschlaeger is expanding the computer database by entering testimony by Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals, political prisoners and other victims of Hitler. Both say their most profound experiences here have come through encounters with Jewish survivors. "In school we learned about the Holocaust through facts and numbers," says Hannesschlaeger. "But there is a totally different feeling after you talk to the survivors and realize how much they have suffered." He has also discovered that "there are places near my home which I cherished as a child, and now I learn that the death marches at the end of the war passed along the same spots," he says. "I don't feel guilty, but it makes me sad. Why did the people just look on and didn't do anything?" Hannesschlaeger plans to dedicate his career to Holocaust education when he returns home. Both interns are reluctant to talk about the political situation in Austria, where the far-right Freedom Party has entered the government and raised fears of a neo-Nazi revival. "We really do not want to criticize our government while we are abroad," says Zotti. "We hope that our Gedenkdienst service will speak for itself." Tom Tugend JTA Los Angeles correspondent Also On J. Bay Area Federation ups Hillel funding after year of protests and tension Local Voice Why Hersh’s death hit all of us so hard: He represented hope Art Trans and Jewish identities meld at CJM show Culture At Burning Man, a desert tribute to the Nova festival’s victims Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes