Amnesty International Group 22 Pasadena/Caltech News
Volume XXV Number 1, January 2017


 UPCOMING EVENTS
  Thursday, January 26, 7:30-9:00 PM. 
Monthly Meeting. We meet at the Caltech Y, 
Tyson House, 505 S. Wilson Ave., Pasadena. 
(This is just south of the corner with San 
Pasqual. Signs will be posted.) We will be 
planning our activities for the coming months. 
Please join us! Refreshments provided.
  Tuesday, February 14, 7:30-9:00 PM. Letter 
writing meeting at Caltech Athenaeum, corner 
of Hill and California in Pasadena. This 
informal gathering is a great way for 
newcomers to get acquainted with Amnesty.
  Sunday, February 19, 6:30 PM. Rights 
Readers Human Rights Book Discussion 
Group. This month we read "Three Minutes 
in Poland" by Glenn Kurtz.

COORDINATOR'S CORNER
Hi everyone

Wow-that's all I can say after Rob and I 
participated in the Women's March this past 
Saturday in DTLA (as it is called now by the 
"hipsters" who reside there, Down Town LA). 

Several Group 22 members came and marched, 
along with 750,000 others.  Very high energy 
which hopefully will translate into effective 
activism. See photos of Group 22 members near 
the end of the newsletter.

 Con Carino, Kathy




Next Rights Readers Meeting
Sunday, Feb. 19  
6:30 PM 

Vroman's Bookstore
695 E Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena

Three Minutes In Poland
by Glenn Kurtz




'Three Minutes in Poland' by Glenn Kurtz.
Review by Julia M. Klein, in Chicago Tribune.
 

How did 3 minutes of film shot in 1938 reunite 
Holocaust survivors?

In the summer of 1938, David Kurtz, an 
American businessman on a six-week European 
vacation with his wife and friends, made a home 
movie that captured three minutes of life in his 
birthplace, the Polish town of Nasielsk.

In Germany, Hitler's anti-Semitic noose was 
tightening, and the dictator's bellicosity toward 
Czechoslovakia dominated newspaper 
headlines. But Kurtz could not have imagined 
that four years later most of Nasielsk's 
substantial Jewish population, about 3,000 
people, would be murdered, or that his silent 
film would provide rare evidence of their pre-
war existence.

More than 70 years later, David's grandson, 
Glenn Kurtz, would discover the 16 mm film 
moldering in a sealed metal can. Kurtz had the 
original film restored and donated it to the 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 
Washington, D.C. And he set about learning 
everything he could about its contents.

"Three Minutes in Poland: Discovering a Lost 
World in a 1938 Family Film" - along with the 
remarkable four-year quest it documents - is 
an act of reverence, as well as a feat of archival 
reconstruction. Kurtz's patience, energy and 
appetite for detail seem boundless, and they 
gradually bring a community - a microcosm of 
Polish Jewry, with all its political and religious 
factions and class divisions - (almost) to life.

The many names and relationships that Kurtz 
unearths may be hard for readers to keep 
straight, but their repetition, each time with 
more detail or lusher context, takes on the 
quality of an incantation. The book accumulates 
elegiac power.

One model for Kurtz's endeavor, which he 
references, is Daniel Mendelsohn's 2006 
masterpiece, "The Lost: A Search for Six of Six 
Million," which traces the fate of six relatives 
who died in the Holocaust. Kurtz, too, sees his 
subject as a metonym, a part that stands for the 
whole. The film, he writes, serves as "a memorial 
to (the town's) lost Jewish community and to the 
entire annihilated culture of East European 
Judaism." He is deeply aware of the limits of his 
enterprise: "No film, no memorial, and no 
recollection could restore, retrieve, recover, or 
revive this world," he writes somberly.

The Kurtz film itself is non-narrative, a series of 
panoramic views and seemingly unrelated 
scenes. It shows dozens of adults, 
schoolchildren, the town synagogue, building 
facades, the interior of a home, and what 
appears to be a restaurant. Residents respond 
enthusiastically to the presence of the Americans 
and their camera, vying to be part of the picture.

But recovering even a handful of identities and 
stories from these visual clues and archival 
research is daunting. At first, Kurtz - relying 
on his family's oral history - is mistaken about 
which town his grandfather has filmed. Later, 
stymied, he sets the project aside.

Then he gets a lucky break. A friend sends the 
granddaughter of a Nasielsk survivor a link to 
the Kurtz film, available through the Holocaust 
museum's archives. She somehow recognizes 
her grandfather, Maurice Chandler, as a boy of 
13. Now 86, but with a prodigious memory, he 
turns out to be the Rosetta stone that unlocks the 
film's secrets. With his help, Kurtz is able to 
locate a half-dozen or so other Nasielsk 
survivors - all who remain of the 100 or so 
Jews from the town still alive in 1945. (Most, 
though not all, had survived by fleeing east to 
Soviet-controlled territory.)

Seeking anyone who might have memories to 
share, Kurtz travels to Canada, England, Israel 
and, of course, Poland. He pores through lists 
(many containing "obscurities or errors"), 
assembles documents and photos, conducts 
interviews. He realizes when he talks to 
survivors that "unspeakable absences lay coiled 
inside every memory I evoked."

In the end, he prides himself on having helped 
reunite this fragmentary community. He has 
spurred phone calls and meetings, and shown 
people in their 80s and 90s portraits of relatives 
they haven't seen since the war - has been "like 
a switchboard operator, connecting long-
distance messages from one end of the Nasielsk 
Diaspora to another."

"Three Minutes in Poland" describes with 
horrifying precision the ordeals that preceded 
the murders of most of Nasielsk's Jewish 
community. But equally compelling pages 
document how Chandler, with guile, luck and 
some Polish help, escaped the Warsaw ghetto, 
took on a non-Jewish Polish identity and 
managed to survive.

When his brother's friend Leslie Glodek, who 
ended up in England, wrote to Nasielsk after the 
war to see if anyone was still left, Chandler 
responded: "We are splinters of a bygone whole, 
torn-off arms with no prospects for the future."

But that was not quite true. Remembering an old 
address, Chandler contacted a distant relative in 
Nashville, Tenn. The man had died by then, but 
the postman gave the letter to the man's 
nephew, who helped Chandler emigrate.

In America, Chandler prospered, started a 
family and created a warm new world. Even so, 
he tells Kurtz, he never stopped missing his 
murdered mother.

Julia M. Klein is a reporter and critic in Philadelphia 
and a contributing editor at Columbia Journalism 
Review.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/lifestyles/books/ct-
prj-three-minutes-in-poland-glenn-kurtz-20141113-
story.html


About the Author
Glenn Kurtz, a 2016 Guggenheim Foundation 
Fellow, is the author of Three Minutes in Poland: 
Discovering a Lost World in a 1938 Family Film 
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux 2014), which was 
selected as a "Best Book of 2014" by The New 
Yorker, The Boston Globe, and National Public 
Radio. The Wall Street Journal praised it as 
"captivating," and The Los Angeles Times 
described Three Minutes in Poland as 
"breathtaking."

Glenn's first book, Practicing: A Musician's 
Return to Music (Knopf, 2007; Vintage Books, 
2008), was hailed by the New York Times as "a 
thoughtful and fluid meditation" and by 
Newsday as "the book of a lifetime." Practicing 
was featured on NPR's "Weekend Edition" with 
Scott Simon, "To the Best of our Knowledge," 
WNYC's "Leonard Lopate Show," and 
elsewhere. An Italian edition appeared in 2010, 
and a Chinese edition is forthcoming.
He is a graduate of the New England 
Conservatory-Tufts University double degree 
program and holds a PhD from Stanford 
University in German studies and comparative 
literature.

His writing has been published in The New York 
Times, Salon, Southwest Review, ZYZZYVA, and 
elsewhere. He has taught at Stanford University, 
California College of the Arts, and New York 
University.

He lives in New York City.




Security with Human Rights
By Robert Adams


Priority Security with Human Rights Cases

The Security with Human Rights campaign 
fights for individuals who have been tortured or 
unlawfully detained, and also works to uphold 
the rights of victims of armed groups.

Currently, one of the seven individuals Amnesty 
is campaigning for is Obaidullah:

Obaidullah: Waiting in Limbo

Obaidullah was captured from his home in 
Afghanistan during a night raid by U.S. Special 
Forces in July 2002. The raid was conducted on a 
tip from an unknown source. For more than 13 
years, he has been incarcerated without trial 
some 8,000 miles from his home and family in 
Afghanistan. His daughter, born two days 
before he was taken into custody, is now 11 
years old. He has never touched or held her, 
only recently making his first contact with her, 
over videophone from the detention facility at 
Guant‡namo Bay.

Obaidullah was taken first to the prison at 
Bagram, where he was held until October 2002. 
During that time, he describes brutal treatment. 
The guards chained his arms above his head for 
extended periods of time, and often forced him 
to defecate on himself by refusing him a toilet. A 
guard slammed him into a door, resulting in a 
broken and bloody nose. He says he received no 
medical treatment for this incident. He was once 
bound by the arms and legs and slammed to the 
ground feet first, feeling as if his heel had been 
broken. He was subjected to sleep deprivation 
and to multiple beatings. He was forced to carry 
and clean the barrel- like containers that were 
used as detainee toilets and to clean a hall, 
sometimes using only a toothbrush. 
Interrogators told him that if he did not 
cooperate with them, "these kinds of 
punishments would continue for my whole 
life." He was threatened with sexual abuse 
during interrogations.

In October 2002, he was transferred to 
Guant‡namo, where he has been ever since. In 
2013, after more than a decade in Guant‡namo, 
he participated in a hunger strike for several 
months. Since the day he was picked up, the 
U.S. government has justified Obaidullah's 
detention based on a flawed legal framework in 
what it then called the "global war on terror," 
pursuant to which the U.S. considers that it can 
hold Obaidullah and other detainees until the 
U.S. determines hostilities to have ended.

For further information on Obaidullah's case, and the 
other individuals Amnesty is currently campaigning 
for, please visit amnestyusa.org.  

Note: On August 15, 2016, Obaidullah, along with 
fourteen other men, was transferred by the US from 
Guantanamo to the United Arab Emirates, and that 
same day Amnesty International USA issued a press 
release welcoming the news. On August 17, a 
member of Obaidullah's family relayed to the 
Associated Press that one of Obaidullah's lawyers 
had informed them that after living in the UAE for 
six months to a year, he would be free to leave.  




DEATH PENALTY NEWS
By Stevi Carroll


Ronald Smith

Let's say it's 1994 or 1995 and you're on a jury 
and you and your fellow jurors reject the death 
penalty in favor of life in prison without parole.  
Let's say you are a justice and you and three of 
your fellow justices vote to grant stay for an 
execution so that the case can be reviewed just 
hours before the execution. Now let's also say 
the man on trial is 23 years old, an Army 
reservist with severe alcohol dependency who 
confesses to murdering a convenience store 
clerk and who expresses sincere remorse.  
Furthermore, let's say this Army reservist is 
poor and the only lawyer available for his post-
conviction appeal is a volunteer counsel who 
suffers from drug and alcohol dependency and 
who is arrested, loses his ability to practice law, 
and commits suicide. Let's think for a moment 
about what will happen to the man who has 
been tried for murder in this situation.

This man, Ronald Smith, lived in Alabama.  
When his jury ruled that yes, he was guilty and 
yes, they rejected the death penalty, an elected 
judge overruled the jury and sentenced Mr 
Smith to death.  Alabama is the only state in 
which a judge can do this.

Alabama has a one-year limitation period within 
which the petition for post-conviction appeals 
can be brought before the court, and yes, Mr. 
Smith's lawyer abandoned him, allowing the 
judge's decision to override the jury's life 
verdict to stand.

December 7, 2016, just after 5:00 PM the Court 
temporarily halts Mr. Smith's execution set for 6 
PM to consider a stay that would allow for a 
motion for reconsideration to be filed.  Four 
justices are required for a grant to review the 
case, but five justices are required for a stay of 
execution so that review can be able to go 
forward. Four justices vote yes while that one 
more justice needed for the stay votes no.  The 
execution is now scheduled for 9:45 PM.

What happens beginning at 9:45 PM? Well, at 
10:34 after Mr. Smith receives the first drug, he 
begins struggling for breath.  He heaves, he 
coughs, and he clenches his left fist.  This 
continues to 10:37 when the first 'consciousness 
check' is performed.  At 10:47 PM when the 
second 'consciousness check' is performed, his 
right arm and hand move. At 11:05, Mr. Smith is 
declared dead.

Was justice served? We just celebrated Dr. 
Martin Luther King, Jr's birthday. In his sermon 
"Loving Your Enemies," Dr. King preached a 
philosophy that had no room for capital 
retribution: "Returning hate for hate multiplies 
hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already 
devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out 
darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot 
drive out hate; only love can do that. Hate 
multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, 
and toughness multiplies toughness in a 
descending spiral of destruction."

Rest in peace and power Dr. Martin Luther 
King, Jr. and Ronald Smith.

Dylann Roof

Dylann Roof, the man who murdered nine 
people June 17, 2015, at Emanuel African 
Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, 
South Carolina, has been sentenced to death.  
Both Amnesty International USA and Sister 
Helen Prejean issued statements after this 
verdict was announced.  They are as follows: 

Amnesty International USA
January 4, 2017
Executing Dylann Roof Will Not Bring Justice

In response to the announcement that Dylann 
Roof was sentenced to death after being convicted 
in the killing of nine people at Emanuel African 
Methodist Episcopal Church, Margaret Huang, 
executive director of Amnesty International USA 
issued the following statement:
"We have seen over the course of Dylann Roof's 
trial and sentencing the horrific suffering he 
inflicted and the disgusting racial animus that 
motivated his actions. However, sentencing him 
to death is not justice. The death penalty is an 
ineffective punishment that strips all individuals 
of their human rights, and has itself embodied 
racism in the criminal justice system. It will not 
heal the deep racial wounds that continue to 
wreak violence in our nation."
For more than two decades, death sentences and 
executions have steadily declined in the United 
States because the punishment is costly, 
ineffective, and unjust. 2015 saw the fewest 
executions of any year since the reinstatement of 
capital punishment in 1976. Today's sentence is a 
step in the wrong direction, away from human 
rights and true justice.
Amnesty International USA opposes the death 
penalty in all cases without exception as the 
ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading 
punishment. As of today, 140 countries have 
abolished the death penalty in law or practice. 
The U.S. was one of only nine countries in the 
world that carried out executions each year 
between 2009 and 2013.
Sister Helen Prejean
January 10 at 4:02pm

A federal jury in Charleston, South Carolina, 
sentenced Dylann Roof to death for the murder of 
nine African American churchgoers. This is the 
first time a jury has delivered a death sentence in 
a federal hate crime case. Dylann Roof's racist 
attitudes and abhorrent actions have no place in 
the world, but executing him will not bring the 
victims back and will not erase the stain of racism 
from our social fabric. Killing another human 
being, whether it is an individual or government 
doing the killing, is wrong. Death does not foster 
justice or peace. Martin Luther King Jr, whose 
birthday falls on Sunday, preached this truth. It is 
up to all of us to foster a more just world, both in 
the institutions we encounter and in our own 
personal lives.

Recent Exonerations

Charles Palmer State: IL Date of Exoneration: 
11/23/2016
In 2000, Charles Palmer was sentenced to life in 
prison without parole for the murder of an 
attorney in Decatur, Illinois. He was exonerated 
in 2016 by DNA testing that excluded him as the 
killer.
Michael Amick State: MO Date of Exoneration: 
12/1/2016
In 2011, Michael Amick was sentenced to life in 
prison for arson and the murder of his wife's 
grandmother in Myrtle, Missouri. He was 
acquitted at a retrial in December 2016 after 
presenting evidence negating any financial 
motive for the crime.
Joseph Dick, Jr. State: VA Date of Exoneration: 
12/15/2016
Joseph Dick, Jr. was one of four U.S. Navy 
sailors (known as the Norfolk Four) convicted of 
a 1997 rape and murder in Norfolk, Virginia. He 
was exonerated in 2016 after the real killer 
confessed.
Danial Williams State: VA Date of Exoneration: 
12/15/2016
Danial Williams was one of four U.S. Navy 
sailors (known as the Norfolk Four) convicted of 
a 1997 rape and murder in Norfolk, Virginia. He 
was exonerated in 2016 after the real killer 
confessed.
Robert Davis State: VA Date of Exoneration: 
12/16/2016 
In 2004, Robert Davis pled guilty to murdering a 
woman and her toddler son in Crozet, Virginia. 
In 2016, Davis was pardoned by Virginia Gov. 
Terry McAuliff after his two co-defendants 
admitted that they lied about his participation in 
the crimes.

Stays of executions

January
11	Anthony Kirkland		OH
12	Ronald Phillips		OH 
	(Stayed/Rescheduled)
12	James Hanna			OH 
	(Reprieve granted)
19	Clark Richard Elmore		WA 
	(Reprieve granted)

Executions

December 2016
6	William Sallie		GA	
	Lethal Injection 1-drug (Pentobarbital)
8	Ronald Bert Smith Jr	AL	
	Lethal Injection 3-drug (midazolam)




WRITE FOR RIGHTS 2016
By Joyce Wolf


We met on Dec. 10 from 11 to 4. What a great 
event! Thanks to Trevor for suggesting the Dog 
Haus in Old Town Pasadena and to Stevi for 
making the arrangements with Dog Haus. 

The 12 Amnesty Cases:
Letters to Officials    98  
Solidarity Cards       63
Total                         161

Postcards for Narges (our POC)  14
Solidarity cards to Narges  4

Cards to Ye Jinyue       11
(Ye Jinyue is an imprisoned Falun Gong 
practitioner with friends in San Gabriel.)

We received $26 in cash donations for postage, 
plus a very generous check from Laura and Ted 
- many thanks!

We had 23 attendees, some of whom stayed 
nearly the entire afternoon. Paul, Stevi, Trevor, 
Jamil, Candy, Gail, Paula, Wen, Kathy and 
Robert, Alexi and sons Lucas and James, Laura 
and Ted, Vinnie, Wenny, Ming, Jamie, Lilian, 
Sibyl, and Carla - thank you all for helping to 
make the world a better place, one letter at a 
time.




GROUP 22 JANUARY LETTER COUNT
Urgent Actions                22
POC (postcards)                3
To add your letters to our total contact 
aigp22@caltech.edu 


Amnesty International Group 22
The Caltech Y
Mail Code C1-128
Pasadena, CA 91125
www.its.caltech.edu/~aigp22/
http://rightsreaders.blogspot.com


Amnesty International's mission is to undertake research and action focused on 
preventing and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical and mental integrity, 
freedom of conscience and expression, and freedom from discrimination, within the 
context of its work to promote all human rights.