Simon Wiesenthal

Simon Wiesenthal

Simon Wiesenthal Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Sep. 20, 2005.
LOS ANGELES - Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor who helped track down numerous Nazi war criminals following World War II then spent the later decades of his life fighting anti-Semitism and prejudice against all people, died Tuesday. He was 96.

Wiesenthal died in his sleep at his home in Vienna, Austria, according to Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean and founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.

"I think he'll be remembered as the conscience of the Holocaust. In a way he became the permanent representative of the victims of the Holocaust, determined to bring the perpetrators of the greatest crime to justice," Hier told The Associated Press.

Wiesenthal, who had been an architect before World War II, changed his life's mission after the war, dedicating himself to trying to track down Nazi war criminals and to being a voice for the 6 million Jews who died during the onslaught. He himself lost 89 relatives in the Holocaust.

Wiesenthal spent more than 50 years hunting Nazi war criminals, speaking out against neo-Nazism and racism, and remembering the Jewish experience as a lesson for humanity. Through his work, he said, some 1,100 Nazi war criminals were brought to justice.

"When history looks back I want people to know the Nazis weren't able to kill millions of people and get away with it," he once said.

His life's quest began after the Americans liberated the Mauthausen death camp in Austria where Wiesenthal was a prisoner in May 1945. It was his fifth death camp among the dozen Nazi camps in which he was imprisoned, and he weighed just 99 pounds when he was freed. He said he quickly realized "there is no freedom without justice," and decided to dedicate "a few years" to seeking justice.

"It became decades," he added.

Even after reaching the age of 90, Wiesenthal continued to remind and to warn. While appalled at atrocities committed by Serbs against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo in the 1990s, he said no one should confuse the tragedy there with the Holocaust.

"We are living in a time of the trivialization of the word 'Holocaust,'" he said in an interview with The Associated Press in May 1999. "What happened to the Jews cannot be compared with all the other crimes. Every Jew had a death sentence without a date."

Wiesenthal's life spanned a violent century.

He was born on Dec. 31, 1908, to Jewish merchants at Buczacs, a small town near the present-day Ukrainian city of Lvov in what was then the Austro-Hungarian empire. He studied in Prague and Warsaw and in 1932 received a degree in civil engineering.

He apprenticed as a building engineer in Russia before returning to Lvov to open an architectural office. Then the Russians and the Germans occupied Lvov and the terror began.

After the war ended, working first with the Americans and later from a cramped Vienna apartment packed floor to ceiling with documents, Wiesenthal tirelessly pursued fugitive Nazi war criminals.

He was perhaps best known for his role in tracking down Adolf Eichmann, the one-time SS leader who organized the extermination of the Jews. Eichmann was found in Argentina, abducted by Israeli agents in 1960, tried and hanged for crimes committed against the Jews.

Wiesenthal often was accused of exaggerating his role in Eichmann's capture. He did not claim sole responsibility, but said he knew by 1954 where Eichmann was.

Eichmann's capture "was a teamwork of many who did not know each other," Wiesenthal told The Associated Press in 1972. "I do not know if and to what extent reports I sent to Israel were used."

Among others Wiesenthal tracked down was Austrian policeman Karl Silberbauer, who he believes arrested the Dutch teenager Anne Frank and sent her to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where she died. Officials never reacted to the tip.

Wiesenthal decided to pursue Silberbauer in 1958 after a youth told him he did not believe in Frank's existence and murder, but would if Wiesenthal could find the man who arrested her. His five-year search resulted in Silberbauer's 1963 capture.

Wiesenthal did not bring to justice one prime target — Dr. Josef Mengele, the infamous "Angel of Death" of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Mengele died in South America after eluding capture for decades.

Wiesenthal's long quest for justice also stirred controversy.

In Austria, which took decades to acknowledge its own role in Nazi crimes, Wiesenthal was ignored and often insulted before finally being honored for his work when he was in his 80s.

In 1975, then-Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, himself a Jew, suggested Wiesenthal was part of a "certain mafia" seeking to besmirch Austria. Kreisky even claimed Wiesenthal collaborated with Nazis to survive.

Ironically, it was the furor over Kurt Waldheim, who became president in 1986 despite lying about his past as an officer in Hitler's army, that gave Wiesenthal stature in Austria.

Wiesenthal's failure to condemn Waldheim as a war criminal drew international ire and conflict with American Jewish groups.

But it made Austrians realize that the Nazi hunter did not condemn everybody who took part in the Nazi war effort.

Wiesenthal did repeatedly demand Waldheim's resignation, seeing him as a symbol of those who suppressed Austria's role as part of Hitler's German war and death machine. But he turned up no proof of widespread allegations that Waldheim was an accessory to war crimes.

He pursued his crusade of remembrance into old age with the vigor of youth, with patience and determination. But as he entered his 90s, he worried that his mission would die with him.

"I think in a way the world owes him and his memory a tremendous amount of gratitude," Hier said.

Wiesenthal had more distinguished foreign awards than any other living Austrian citizen. In 1995, the city of Vienna made him an honorary citizen. He also wrote several books, including his memoirs, "The Murderers Among Us," in 1967, and worked regularly at the small downtown office of his Jewish Documentation Center even after turning 90.

"The most important thing I have done is to fight against forgetting and to keep remembrance alive," he said in the 1999 interview with The Associated Press. "It is very important to let people know that our enemies are not forgotten."

Wiesenthal's wife, Cyla, whom he married in 1936, died in November 2003.




Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press

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116 Entries

Harry Simpson

September 20, 2019

Rest in Peace Simon. Your pursuit of justice was indomitable....

Miracle

June 21, 2008

I sorry to hear about your lost and I would like to share with the family a comforting scripture at John11:25" Jesus said I am the resurrction and the life he that exercises faith in me, even though he dies will come to life.

Robyn Leonard

October 3, 2005

Good-bye to a true hero. My thoughts & prayers to those he left behind.



SHALOM!!

raymond mcneice

October 2, 2005

as an irish man i have always admired

his constant pursuit.

the lord giveth,let only

the lord taketh away

may he rest in peace.

melissa

October 2, 2005

the passing of a great man. visiting the simon wiesenthal center in vienna was a moving experience.

Anne-Marie Elefteriadis

September 29, 2005

Dear Mr Wiesenthal

The old and the new world have lost a great man but you will live forever in my heart and soul. I always admired your perseverance and courage to stand up for the speakless and forgotten human beings. Thank you for teaching me the other side of history that is part of our collective memory for ever.

Lorraine

September 27, 2005

Thank you for being an example of honor. Thank you for not being afraid to stand up and be heard. And most of all thank you for insuring that we will never forget.

Jorge Freiberg

September 25, 2005

May you rest in peace after giving peace of mind to all of us who did not believe in justice until you brought it to us.

MARC SIMBROW

September 25, 2005

I WAS VERY SAD TO HERE THE PASSING AWAY OF SIMON WIESENTHAL.



HE PUT A LOT OF NAZI'S AWAY THE WORLD WILL MISS HIM.



SHEMI Y'IREAL ADON AED HUD.



MAY HE REST IN PEACE.



MAY HIS WORK NEVER BE UNDONE.

Judy W Gill

September 25, 2005

Though I am not of the Jewish faith I have opportunities to be aware of your tenacity and devotion to your people to right the wrongs done to those who can no longer speak for themselves...May you rest in peace...

Jackie Morris

September 24, 2005

The world has lost a GREAT hero. May he rest in peace knowing that he was greatly appreciated and loved.

Judith C.. Kirman

September 24, 2005

May you and your family live in the House of the Lord forever and ever for your accomplishments on behalf of all the Jewish people of the world. Shalom.

Mara Alexander

September 23, 2005

Shalom Chaver Shelnu Shimon

The true meaning of Tikkun Olam. This man came into the world and left it in a better place. Let us never forget the fruition of his works.

Marti Terziu

September 23, 2005

We were all blessed to have had such a courageous and caring person in our lives. Thanks to Mr. Wiesenthal, for generations to come, "We will never forget."

SAM Tedesco

September 23, 2005

Best wishes to a man with a cause that kept on the tail of injustice.

Glen Hausfeld

September 23, 2005

Dear Simon Weiesenthal

Tonight we remember you as your name is said at our Friday night services at Temple Israel in Minneapolis MN.





Glen J Hausfeld

Alex Bromberg

September 23, 2005

My deepest sympaty goes out to the Wiesenthal family.I am a second generation holocaust survivor and your work means so much to all of us.May you rest in peace.A job well done.I will never forget.

Brenda Patching

September 23, 2005

Love means never forgetting

Susan Brown

September 23, 2005

By the grace of GOD, Mr. Wiesenthal assembled an awesome collection. I had the privilege of coordinating the effort to mount the Simon Wiesenthal Collection that was available at the Baltimore Jewish Center. My Agency was honored to display it during it's commemoration of the Holocaust.I am grateful to have had this experience.

BRIAN WAUGAMAN

September 23, 2005

AND SO THE CANDLE HAS BLOWN OUT!! NOW SIMON YOU CAN REST,

FOR YOU HAVE DONE YOUR WORK.

YOU WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN!

YOUR NAME WILL BE IMMORTAL.

TODAY WE WILL ALL CRY FOR YOUR LOSS. SHALOAM TO A GREAT WORRIOR. R.I.P.

DARLENE JENNINGS

September 23, 2005

THE WORLD IS A DIMMER PLACE TODAY BECAUSE OF THE "HOME GOING" OF MR. WIESENTHAL. HE WAS A TRUE "HERO." MY DEEP SORROW FOR HIS FAMILY, HIS COUNTRY AND THE REST OF US THAT LOVE ISRAEL AND HER PEOPLE.

Gary White

September 23, 2005

A great man has passed from this world. His work and his memory will remain with us. Simon Wiesenthal was a true hero. "Never Forget!"

JONATHAN LANDAU

September 23, 2005

GOD BLESS MR.WIESENTHAL . A SINGLE VOICE AGAINST THE WHOLE WORLD . TRUE JUSTICE WON . YESHAR KOACH TO YOU SIR .

Carl Saunders

September 23, 2005

In the death of Simom Wiesenthal a great weapon of peace, truth and justice has been silenced, yet, the echoes of his spiritual voice will not be quieted, but will wander the earth inspiring others. In his tablets of time, truth and goodness have been deeply chiseled for time immemorial.Well done good and faithful servant, your duty has earned you rest as your spirit continues. CES

Michael Mueller

September 22, 2005

Being born and raised to an American father and a German Mother in Germany, I understood the magnitude of this Nazi regime.

I am glad that this came to an end, I silently weep for all the victims on either side.

Your work, I believe has brought justice where justice was long overdue.

Michael Mueller

Ed Chapman

September 22, 2005

I never had the honor to meet Mr Wiesenthal, but I began reading about him when I was young. He had to have been one of the bravest men I have ever read of. He stood up when no one wanted to know & made people listen. My God bless his soul & his memory live forever so we may never forget the past.

Fred Sweet

September 22, 2005

I have followed Mr. Wiesenthal's exploits through the years as I grew up in the south. He has been an inspiration for every person who has suffered the indignity of oppression by a government.

Donald Ballard

September 22, 2005

I attended a prayer brekfast in Berlin, Germany where Herr Wiesenthal was the guest speaker. When one looks into the heavens tonight, one will see a new star. That will be Simon Wiesenthal

Rick Passan

September 22, 2005

Sincere condolances to Mr. Wiesenthal's family and frilends. Our world is indeed a better place for all he has done for mankind. May we ALL "Never Forget".

arlene fein

September 22, 2005

my condolences to the family of a true hero

Jennifer Ruskin

September 22, 2005

He was a great man and will be missed dearly. Rest in Peace.

C. Benhamou

September 22, 2005

Mister Wiesenthal taught us never to forget. He was not only the conscience of the Holocaust but also the witness of atrocities that anti-Semitism generates. His death is a huge loss.

Fred Wein

September 22, 2005

You will be missed very much may G-D bless you

miriam lunenfeld

September 22, 2005

My deepest symphathy to your family. Mr. Wiesenthal was an inspiration. There should be more people in the world like him.

September 21, 2005

Take him and cut him out in little stars,

And he will make the face of heav'n so fine

That all the world will be in love with night,

And pay no worship to the garish sun.

Nora Magnano

September 21, 2005

To a great man. May he rest in peace

Joan Campion

September 21, 2005

I remember having lunch with Mr. Wiesenthal in a hotel dining room in New York City. He was assessing me and my work on the life of the Holocaust heroine Gisi Fleischmann. Evidently I met his standards, because he helped me. I am deeply honored by that.

Edward and Elaine Piltz

September 21, 2005

Mr. Wiesenthal was a great human being and devoted his life to finding the Nazi criminals. His memory will live on forever. We as American Jews "WILL NEVER FORGET" nor will we let the world "FORGET" Our Uncle is a "Survivor"

Janet Gray

September 21, 2005

Dear Warrior Simon Wiesenthal...You have truly done God's work. The world is indebted to you and may your memory be an inspiration and drive for those who crave justice today and through all the tomorrows to come...We thank you, no matter our race, religion, creed or gender for we are ONE...

S. Chaye

September 21, 2005

Heartfelt and deepest condolences to the Wiesenthal family. To people everywhere, Simon Wiesenthal has shown every man , woman, and child, that one person CAN make the difference ... may his work and essence live on in each of us... and give voice through our everyday actions. Rest in peace, our beloved Simon. Thank you for your courage and humanity.

George Vera

September 21, 2005

Because of your life I will never forget! Thanks for the teaching! If we just try, just try, this world will be just as in your dreams! Mens like you, never are gone or forgotten.

Thanks

S. Chaye

September 21, 2005

Heartfelt and deepest condolenses to the Wiesenthal family. To people everywhere, Simon Wiesenthal has shown every man , woman, and child, that one man can make the difference ... may his work and essence live on in each of us... and give voice through our everyday actions. Rest in peace, our beloved Simon. Thank you for your courage and humanity.

Khari Dala-Koll

September 21, 2005

"What a piece of work is man! How noble in reason!" Your life is an example to us all. I will teach my children about the Holocaust via the good works that you did. The world is a lesser place with your passing.

Deborah San Gabriel

September 21, 2005

Becauseof you, Lady Justice was able to smile, not weep. May the fruits your work live on forever, Baruch Hashem.

Victor Hicks

September 21, 2005

You had a purpose in life and greatly fullfilled it.I can't think of many people in my life that I could call my hero, but Simon Wiesenthal you were truly one of the very few.

Arlene Rose

September 21, 2005

To all who remember Simon Wiesenthal,

We understand that he lost 89 family members in the Holocaust.

No one can imagine what he must have endured to survive. Thank God he did. He chose to make his life count for all those who could not have a life and for future generations, too. The world owes him so much! May we never forget! Rest in peace, brave soul!

Arlene Rose

Margaret Gacke

September 21, 2005

My condolences to Mr. Wiesenthal's family on the passing of this great

humanitarian. May he rest in peace with all those who passed before him that he so valiently fought to bring justice.

Justice, not vengeance.

Carol Thompson

September 21, 2005

God go with you and rest in peace. We will NEVER forget!

JOHN W MOON,JR

September 21, 2005

NEVER KNEW MR WIESENTHAL,BUT ADMIRED AND RESPECTED HIM. SORRY TO SEE SUCH A GREAT MAN PASS AWAY. MY DEEPEST SYMPATHY.

José Arrais

September 21, 2005

My memories about Simon Wiesenthal come from my years of youth. I read a book called "I chased Eichmann." and it was amazing what he did. I think Simon Wiesenthal will always be remembered by the way he chased the nazi's and found lot's of them. Justice was donne a bit with his incredible help. I'm sure that he's in peace with himself and his legacy will never be forgoten.

Yvonne Westall

September 21, 2005

My deepest sympathies go to your family.

Rest in Peace.

ike ostrove

September 21, 2005

they should have cloned you.

rest in peace

Frederick Farias

September 21, 2005

A great man an architect built justice in the world enabling hope.

Bruce Bernstein

September 21, 2005

Because of you and six million others, I promise we will never forget, ever. Shaloam

denise salzo

September 21, 2005

Rest In peace..

September 21, 2005

GOD BLESS Simon Wiesenthal for everything he did, for every life he saved. May the gates open for him and may he enjoy the paradise he so deserves.

Patricia Zis

September 20, 2005

Thank God for you, Simon Wiesenthal. You made sure we will never forget. Your bravery and righteousness changed the world. Go with God now. Peace to you.

Debb Scott

September 20, 2005

You will be missed !!! WE WILL NOT FORGET !!!! You are free now .. safe in the arms of the God of Abraham : Isaac : and Jacob !!! You have earned your REST ....

Ron Larson

September 20, 2005

I have been awed and amazed at your selfless contribution to simple justice. Ajustice which has helped the overall cause of humanity worldwide.



Once again I Thank-You.



-Ron Larson

Minneapolis

Darlene Griffith

September 20, 2005

Dear Mr. Wiesenthal,

In many ways, I feel as though I know you personally after having read your book "Night." What compassion came from such suffering! May we all learn from your example. We can all work toward eliminating hatred within our society. Your voice will be heard for generation upon generation to come. I say with you Simon "NEVER AGAIN!" Your legacy lives on, dear one.

Howard Levin

September 20, 2005

To a great man. May you rest in peace

HAARDY SEGURA

September 20, 2005

Mr. Wiesenthal left us an invaluable lesson for many of us to learn. "Lead by example".

Natalie Thomas

September 20, 2005

Thank you, Mr. Wiesenthal, for never giving up.

Leila Rosario

September 20, 2005

This man's life-long fight against Antisemitism and Nazism has impacted me very deeply. I can't even imagine what it meant to him to deal with such pain, such memories. My deepest sympathy for his family. Shalom, Simon!

D Gagle

September 20, 2005

God rest his soul. He was a truly great man! I have admired this wonderful human being, who refused to let the world forget their fellowman. He will be missed.

Miriam Strauss

September 20, 2005

Few men go to such lengths to seek peace and justice for his fellow man more than Simon Wiesenthal. A great loss to humanity. Bless him. May his soul rest in peace.

Karen Coker

September 20, 2005

I've lived through the years of hearing of Mr. Wiesenthal and his great works. May God Bless.

Susan Heilbrunn Shapiro

September 20, 2005

Thank you for your life and work.

Mark Haas

September 20, 2005

Shalom, my brother. Your work was long and difficult. Your rewards will be great. Rest now and know that we will always remember.

Lisa Oliva

September 20, 2005

How do you say thank you to someone who had the courage and strength that this man had? After surviving such a life altering experience of hell as the holocaust and then to summon the strength and courage to bring those responsible to justice is beyond being a hero... It may be just two small words, but Thank You for everything you fought for and stood for in your life.

Stephanie Anderson

September 20, 2005

Mr. Wiesenthal was truly on assignment from God. He found his life's purpose and didn't let the camps kill him. They only made him stronger. Praise God! God bless his legacy and family. Stephanie Anderson

Patty Guillebeau

September 20, 2005

May you now sleep with Angels in peace.

Ira Saposnik

September 20, 2005

I had the good fortune to personally speak with Mr. Wiesenthal at Vanderbilt about 8 years ago. The amazing thing about him was the gentleness of nature that the man had after being through the worst things imaginable. It was a lesson that I have kept with me to this day. He shall be missed.

Marc Lucier

September 20, 2005

Not many people fit the mold of the great heroes of the Holy texts. God blessed Simon Wiesenthal with the courage of the righteous, the stamina of the vigilant, and the compassion of the humble. May we all rise to reach the bar he has set.

Richard E Wuchte

September 20, 2005

You Simon were truly a giant and I

think you may have even been one of

those Prophets that God has put on

this earth to be his voice. I know

one thing is for sure you are now

with the Lord eternally and may your

presence still be felt here on earth

by all of us who wait for the day we can join you in God's presence.

May our dear Lord's PEACE be with you and your family and thank you

again for being such a giant for our

times.

Jessica

September 20, 2005

Peace be with you. You're an inspiration. God bless your family and friends.

Andrea Rapp

September 20, 2005

Thank you for speaking for those who perished at the hands of evil.

Jim Garner

September 20, 2005

You have always been an insppiration to all of us to carry on and do whatever is right regardless of the consequences. You are, indeed, a tough act to follow.

Kirk Brewer

September 20, 2005

Mr. Wiesenthal had the courage to pursue justice when it was an unpopular cause, and even when it placed him in grave danger. He challenged authority when it stood in the way of truth. The world owes him thanks for his intellectual and personal strength.

Robert Logan

September 20, 2005

Our World would not be the same without you. For without you, the professional public relations techniques of the deniers would have won, and hatred would still be flourishing.

Pamela Starr

September 20, 2005

May his memory be as a blessing. Simon Wiesanthal was a blessing to survivors and the generations that followed. I was blessed to have met this remarkable, courageous and determined man. The world has lost a tzadik (righteous man) today.

We must remember his life and his message - NEVER AGAIN. B'ruch Hashem.

Joel Barman

September 20, 2005

Mr Wiesenthal was a great human being who will never be forgotten. After being a victim of the Holocaust and facing the atrocities of the Third Reich, he vowed to hunt down all those cowards who ran from justice, he only retired when there were no more left to hunt down. This was a job well done. Thanks to Mr. Wiesenthal, justice was served for most who chose to run and not take responsibility for their atrocities they inflicted on others. May G-d bless the Wiesenthal family with many fond memories of such a wonderful human being.

Glen Hausfeld

September 20, 2005

God bless Mr. Wiesenthal.

When we hear the name Simom Wiesenthal at Temple Israel we see one of our hero's.

we have lost so much.



Glen J Hausfeld

Linda Beth Laney

September 20, 2005

My German in-laws always denied the Holocaust;I am proud to say that through his writings Simon Wiesenthal assured that my 3 children DO believe. The world owes him so much.....

September 20, 2005

Say hi to Wallenberg for us. Rest in peace.

Lnor Levine

September 20, 2005

Our sincere condolences to the family and friends of Simon Wiesenthal, one of our world’s true heroes. His was a voice for truth and justice for all. We pray that a grateful world will never forget the horrors that too often are the product of hate and prejudice. We hope that his legacy will be love and tolerance. May G-d grant him eternal love and peace.



Joel & Lnor Levine (Dunwoody, GA)

Robin Jenkins

September 20, 2005

Courage lives forever. Mr. Wiesenthal will always be with us, and we are the better for it.

Hilarie

September 20, 2005

My God bless you and may you rest in peace. The world thanks you for your amazing work.

Gail M. Frazier-Smith

September 20, 2005

Dear Wiesenthal Family, God will give you strength to endure your loss of Mr. Wiesenthal. He was a strong, brave,and courageous person. I visited Poland in 1993 and went to Aucshwich. I felt the pain of every Jewish person dead or alive. God bless Mr. Wiesenthal. He was a true warrior.

Frank Piloto Jr.,

September 20, 2005

The war against anti-Semitism has lost one of its bravest leaders today. He will be gone, but never forgotten. In his memory, let us Jews stand together and yell out loud the words that symbolize our determination to resistance against our enemies:

NEVER AGAIN!

May Mr. Weisenthal rest in peace and, may G-d grant peace and solace to his family.

Frank A. Piloto Jr.,

Miami, Florida

Christy H

September 20, 2005

Mr.Wiesenthal,

Thank you for your powerful impact on the world.

Anita-Abraham Williams

September 20, 2005

My sympathies to the Wiesenthal family. Bless you Mr. Wiesenthal may you rest in peace. You are a true HERO.

Walter Davis

September 20, 2005

Lady Justice has shed a tear. Now rest.

Andrew Masset

September 20, 2005

May God grant you peace and love for all eternity. It is small compensation for your devotion to truth and justice for humanity.

Jim & Marilyn Anderson

September 20, 2005

We're not Jewish, but we have supported and followed your good work since we were kids. You have been an inspiration and exemplary model for the contribution to justice one person can make. There is no doubt you have already joined our God in His house.

Catie

September 20, 2005

I was just studing you and all the hard work that you have done when i herd the news. I am not a jew but for the work that you did i am very thankful.

Gene Bishop

September 20, 2005

Sincere condolences to the Wiesenthal family. May this man of justice and truth rest in peace forever.

Jeff Vance

September 20, 2005

God Bless You for serving mankind in identifying and bringing to justice the perpetrators of the Holocaust. May your organization continue identifying injustice in this world as living legacy for your memory.

Nancy Lawson

September 20, 2005

May the Lord grant you peace. Thank you for what you did for the Jewish people.

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September 20, 2019

Harry Simpson posted to the memorial.

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October 3, 2005

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