My Brother’s Voice Makes 700th Appearance

April 18, 2012

Jeff Mosier, staff writer with the Las Vegas Review-Journal VIEW, writes a poignant editorial:

Invaluable asset

Nasser receives honorary high school diploma

For Holocaust survivors such as Las Vegas resident Stephen Nasser, time is as priceless as life itself.

Mr. Nasser was just 13 when Nazis rounded up his family and sent them all to Auschwitz. He was the only one of 21 to make it out alive.

Today Mr. Nasser speaks to what likely will be the last generation of children who’ll have the opportunity to hear the horrors of the Holocaust from the mouths of those who lived it. When the aging Mr. Nasser and his peers are gone, future students will have to rely on museums, books and recorded testimonials — decidedly less-personal mediums.

“We’re losing our primary sources to time,” Victoria Gildner, an art teacher at Mack Middle School, told View News writer Jeff Mosier when Mr. Nasser spoke at the Northwest Career and Technical Academy for the Holocaust Education Conference. “It’s a precious resource that we need to expose as many kids to as possible.”

On March 23, Mr. Nasser gave his 700th Holocaust lecture at Las Vegas High School, coinciding with the opening of the school’s Holocaust museum. He pulls no punches in describing his brutal experiences inside the concentration camp. He documented those terrors in a diary written on cement bag paper, which he published in 2003 as My Brother’s Voice.

Mr. Nasser shows no signs of slowing down, as evidenced by the schedule that’s posted on his website. He spoke at four local schools this week alone.

People such as Mr. Nasser are an invaluable asset to this community. The more young people he reaches, the better they’ll understand the message on a T-shirt given to him by students from Faiss Middle School: “Never again.”


Nasser Goes to College

April 6, 2012

Stephen Nasser recently gave a presentation and signed books at Nevada State College. Once again, Stephen’s story touched everyone in the audience, and he made more new friends. His dedication to bringing his brother’s voice to audiences around the country continues to make an impact on young and old.


Back with the Boy Scouts

March 23, 2012

On March 20th, 2012, Stephen Nasser was invited to be a keynote speaker at the International Boy Scout Museum in Las Vegas, where he shared his own Boy Scout plaque from 1943. It was quite an honor; Mayor Carolyn Goodman attended the event and introduced Nasser to the crowd.



My Brother’s Voice BIG at B & N

March 13, 2012

Stephen Nasser appeared recently at Barnes & Noble Booksellers in Las Vegas – and wowed the crowd once again. Young and old, teachers and students, parents and their children, all were captivated by the compelling story of My Brother’s Voice.  This boy’s smile with author Nasser is proof; his tale of woe and triumph speaks to us all.


Nasser Makes News

February 28, 2012

“I think that it definitely taught us not to take life for granted.”

Jeff Mosier, staff writer for the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s View, reported on a powerful experience:

Holocaust survivors speak to students as part of conference

Stephen Nasser was 13 when the Nazis broke into his home and forced him and his family on a train to Auschwitz. Of the 21 people in his family, only he survived the Holocaust.

Nasser told his story to a class full of middle and high school students and teachers. Four other survivors also spoke to students in packed classrooms Feb. 15 at the Northwest Career and Technical Academy, 8200 W. Tropical Parkway, as part of the Holocaust Education Conference.

“This is the last generation that’s going to get to hear from survivors,” said Victoria Gildner, an art teacher at Mack Middle School, 4250 Karen Ave. “We’re losing our primary sources to time. It’s a precious resource that we need to expose as many kids to as possible.”

Nearly 240 students from 35 schools attended the event. Teachers accompanying them went through Holocaust education professional development training to be able to give specialized instruction to students.

At Mack Middle School, teachers are working together as part of a cross-curricular, schoolwide effort to teach the Holocaust. Clark County School District teachers teamed with the Governor’s Advisory Council on Education Relating to the Holocaust to create a series of lessons that could be incorporated into traditional curriculum.

“We really just want our kids to truly put things in perspective,” Mack geography teacher Monica Pienta said.

About 200 Mack students plan to visit the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles in March along with students from O’Callaghan Middle School, 1450 Radwick Drive. The Governor’s Advisory Council is paying for the trip.

Nasser described his life in a concentration camp in grueling, gory detail. His story got gasps, tears and sniffles from the audience for an hour. He wore a black T-shirt given to him by students from Faiss Middle School, 9525 W. Maule Ave., that read “NEVER AGAIN.”

Nasser kept a diary on discarded cement bags that he hid under the straw on his top bunk. He waited more than 50 years to publish it because he did not want his uncle —- who lost his wife and child —- to know how his family died.

“I watched them being massacred six feet away from me,” Nasser said.

Nasser kept the secret until his uncle’s death in 1996. Nasser, a Summerlin-area resident, published his diary, My Brother’s Voice, in 2003 and has given nearly 700 lectures across the country.

He plans to give his 700th lecture to students at Las Vegas High School, 6500 E. Sahara Ave., in March to coincide with the opening of the school’s Holocaust museum, which will not be open to the public.

After hearing from the five survivors, students spent an hour doing a lesson about “hidden children,” reading from primary sources of young people who recorded their histories during the Holocaust. Students were asked to put themselves in the place of those children and write short essay answers to questions.

Students, teachers and survivors had dinner and heard from a hidden child, keynote speaker Myra Genn. She and two family members hid in, among other places, a 7-foot-by-3-foot attic space for 10 months.

Mack eighth-grader Laura Castillo said the experience was better than reading from a textbook.

“I thought that hearing from a survivor is really special because most people don’t get to,” Laura said. “Hearing from the actual person, it’s more realistic.”

Laura’s classmate, Ashley Cruz, walked out with a renewed outlook.

“I think that it definitely taught us not to take life for granted,” she said.


Never Again

July 30, 2011

Each year, Stephen Nasser speaks to the students at Faith Lutheran, sharing stories from My Brother’s Voice. This year, the school had tee shirts with his motto, “Never Again,” for the students, who all insisted he sign their shirts after the presentation. Nasser tirelessly gives his time for the students, who love hearing him speak and vow that a Holocaust will never again happen.


My Brother’s Voice Heard in Germany

July 27, 2011

Stephen Nasser, author of My Brother’s Voice, recently returned from a month in Germany commemorating the sixtieth anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camp at Seeshaupt. Nasser traveled across the country,  speaking and signing books at almost twenty different venues, often two or three locations in one day, telling the story of his struggles and survival in a concentration camp as a young boy, and sharing the story of his brother, who did not survive.

As part of the festivities, Nasser participated in the launch of the German version of his book, Die Stimme meines Bruders, by Wolfgang Maximoser. In addition, German filmmaker Walter Steffen premiered his ninety minute documentary, Endstation Seeshaupt, reenacting the route of the Death train from the Muhldorf concentration camp to Seeshaupt, the point of liberation by General Patton’s third army on April 30, 1945. Mr. Nasser’s visits were also recognized in German newspapers, with local dignitaries and other concentration camp survivors. His tireless dedication to telling his story, his brother’s story, and to Holocaust education is remarkable.


Author also on film!

May 3, 2011

Stephen Nasser was featured in a documentary by filmmaker Walter Steffen made at Endstation Seeshaupt, as part of the 60th anniversary celebration of the liberation of Seeshaupt. Author Nasser read from his book My Brother’s Voice, to a rapt audience. Click here for a link to the German film and interview.


Author visits Germany

May 3, 2011

Recently, the German newspaper, Süddeutsche Zeitung, published a nice article about Stephen Nasser  in both an online and printed edition in commemoration of the April 30th - 60th anniversary of his liberation from the concentration camp at Seeshaupt. If you can read German, here’s the link to the  full article!


A Visit to Orme School

April 12, 2011

The Orme School was privileged and honored to have Mr. Stephen Nasser speak to students and faculty during Vespers on Monday evening, March 28th. Mr. Nasser spoke eloquently about his experience during the Holocaust, and being the only member of his family to have survived. Those present were captivated by his emotionally riveting presentation and amazing story. His book is titled, My Brother’s Voice: How a Young Hungarian Boy Survived the Holocaust: A True Story.

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