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So, as many of you know, I've spent my childhood years in a Warsaw ghetto
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where... my almost my entire family was murdered
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along with about 350.000 other Polish Jews.
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And people sometimes will ask me
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whether that experience had anything to do with my work for animals,
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it didn't have a little to do with my work for animals,
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it had everything to do with my work for animals.
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Throughout that ordeal, before we find ourselves
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by the slogan, "Never again"
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it was an article of faith that our sacrifice would not be in vain.
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That the world would be so shocked by what was done to us.
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That they would never allow atrocities like these to be perpetrated again.
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In 1975, after I emigrated to the United states,
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I happened to visit a slaughterhouse,
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where I saw very frightened animals
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subjected to horrendous crowding conditions,
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while awaiting their deaths.
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Just as my family members were in the notorious Treblinka death camp.
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I saw the same efficient and emotionless killing routine as in Treblinka.
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I saw the neat piles of hearts, hooves and other body parts
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just so reminiscent of the piles of Jewish hair, glasses, and shoes in Treblinka.
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And I recall the allusion by famed Yiddish writer, Isaac Bashevis Singer that,
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"For the animals, all men are Nazis and life is an eternal Treblinka"
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and then it finally dawned on me,
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"Never again"
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is not about what others should not do to us
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"Never again" means that
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we must never again perpetrate mass atrocities against other living beings.
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That we must never again raise animals for food or for any other form of exploitation
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and that's when I became an activist for animal rights.