Robert Spiegelman – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 19 Nov 2024 18:53:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Robert Spiegelman – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 An Extraordinary Bond: 100-year-old Holocaust Survivor and Fordham Professor Find Shared History in the Classroom https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/an-extraordinary-bond-100-year-old-holocaust-survivor-and-fordham-professor-find-shared-history-in-the-classroom/ Mon, 19 Dec 2016 16:50:53 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=60113 This past semester, Robert Spiegelman, Ph.D., showed students in his “Studies in Social Science” College at 60 class a video clip of the Berlin Philharmonic commemorating Adolf Hitler’s birthday with a performance of the “Ode to Joy” from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony during World War II.

“I was quite nervous about showing the clip,” said the Fordham College at Lincoln Center and Rose Hill sociology professor. “It ran for about 10 minutes and at the end of it, I didn’t know if I had gone too far in showing it.

“But I wanted the students to see how the worst of humanity can hijack the best of humanity. Beethoven’s music was positioned as perhaps the highest creation in Western cultural history, but it was hijacked by the Nazis, and that was the irony of the performance.”

Looking around the classroom, Spiegelman saw that some of the students were in tears. Others were enraged and saddened by the consequences of the deadliest war in history. Then 100-year-old Holocaust survivor Mathilde Freund, who has been taking courses at Fordham for over 40 years, raised her hand.

“I’m very glad you showed that video,” said Freund, who shared memories about hiding from Nazis at the same time of the performance, crawling in the forests and stables of France with her mother, being captured, and then being tortured in the Montluc prison in Lyon. “Look, how horrible. While they’re performing this wonderful music of Beethoven, they’re murdering millions of innocent people. Unfortunately, my husband was among the people who died at the Buchenwald concentration camp.’”

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Mathilde Freund holds a photograph of the mass grave at Buchenwald that was taken by Robert Spiegelman’s father Seymour during World War II. Photo by Dana Maxson.

What Freund and Spiegelman didn’t know was that they were connected through this very experience. Speigelman’s father, Seymour, a World War II army corporal, was among the U.S. troops that liberated the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany after Freund’s husband, Fritz, was killed.

“I think it’s telepathy,” said Freund. “I was interested in this course, but I didn’t know that we would talk about the concentration camp or anything like that.”

 For Speigelman, too, this wasn’t a mere coincidence.

“To know that my father was probably within a few feet of where Mathilde’s husband laid just moves me to such great depths,” said Spiegelman, who said his father had been traumatized by what he witnessed. “He wasn’t able to speak about it until years later when I kind of pushed him and he told the story.”

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Corporal Seymour Spiegelman, Germany, 1945. Courtesy of Robert Spiegelman.

From 1933 through 1945, the Nazi party created numerous concentration camps to incarcerate, torture, and kill Jews and other minority groups. Among them were the infamous Auschwitz in Poland and Buchenwald, one of the largest camps in Germany. Freund, who married her husband in 1937, said within months of marriage her family had to flee their homeland of Austria to France, where the men in her family joined the French Army. While she was in hiding, Freund said her husband managed to send her a postcard.

 

Mathilde Freund and her husband Fritz. Courtesy of Mathilde Freund
Mathilde Freund and her husband Fritz. Courtesy of Mathilde Freund.

“He said, ‘I will still survive and when the sun shines, we will be together again,’” she said. “But he was killed.”

Losing her husband wasn’t Freund’s only tragedy. Her only brother was brutally murdered in the Massacre of Lyon on August 18, 1944. In 1952, she arrived in New York with her mother and daughter.

“Some people say we should forget the past and we shouldn’t talk about it, but I say we should never forget because innocent people were killed. It was cruelty beyond imagination. No book or video can ever represent the sorrow that a person who was there saw and lived, like me. Those seven years of my life were the most horrible times.”

Freund said that Fordham’s College at 60 program has helped her make peace with the painful memories of her past.

“It helps me so much because when I’m in the class I don’t think of anything else,” said Freund, who has been taking classes since she retired from social work in 1977. “I concentrate only on what the professor teaches. It’s one of the things that takes me away.”

She said her secret to living as long as she has is that she doesn’t allow herself to be bitter about the things she endured during the Holocaust. Instead, she would rather share her story widely so that such mass genocide never happens again.

“It’s my sacred duty,” she said. “My greatest wish in life is that I can see peace on earth, and that people can understand each other.”

Spiegelman called the special connection he shares with Freund “a living bond” that goes beyond history. It has also helped him to honor his father’s legacy.

“Our shared experience gives voice to what my father couldn’t say,” said Spiegelman.

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Upcoming at Fordham: College at 60 Summer Film Series https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/upcoming-at-fordham-college-at-60-summer-film-series/ Tue, 12 Jun 2012 14:29:49 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=30914 Scholar Named Toppeta Chair in Global Financial Markets

James Lothian, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Finance in the Fordham Schools of Business, has been named the inaugural holder of the Toppeta Family Chair in Global Financial Markets in the Gabelli School of Business.

The chair was established with a $1 million gift from Bill Toppeta, FCRH ’70, and his wife Debra.

In his new position, Lothian, who joined the Fordham faculty in 1990 and was named Distinguished Professor of Finance in 1997, will continue to devote time to researching international finance, monetary economics (including monetary policy), financial history—both U.S. and international—and the incidence and international transmission of economic disturbances.

Lothian received his doctorate and master’s degrees in economics from the University of Chicago and his bachelor’s degree magna cum laude from the Catholic University of America.

He has served as director of Fordham’s Frank J. Petrilli Center for Research in International Finance since 2002. He has served as the editor of the Journal of International Money and Finance since 1986, and has been a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.

— Patrick Verel


Photo courtesy Thomson Reuters

University Board of Trustees Elects New Chair

Robert D. Daleo, GSB ’72, has been elected chair of the Fordham University Board of Trustees, effective July 1, 2012, the Office of the President has announced.

Daleo, the vice chairman of Thomson Reuters, has been a member of Fordham’s Board of Trustees since 2008, is the current chair of the finance and investment committee, and a member of the board’s executive committee. He was also a founding member of Fordham’s President’s Council. Daleo previously served as executive vice president and chief financial officer of Thomson Reuters. He was executive vice president and chief financial officer of the Thomson Corporation and also served as a member of the Thomson Corporation’s board of directors prior to the company’s acquisition of Reuters Group PLC in 2008.

“It speaks volumes that Fordham can claim alumni as gifted and accomplished as Bob Daleo, and that we can attract such talent to serve on the University’s Board of Trustees,” said Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham. “He brings broad experience, financial acumen, and Jesuit roots to the chairman’s position, all of which are tremendous assets in advancing Fordham’s mission.”

Daleo takes over for John N. Tognino, PCS ’75, who was honored for his service to the University at the March 26 Founder’s Award Dinner.

Daleo sits on the board of directors of Equifax Inc., and is chairman of the board of directors of the New Jersey Community Development Corporation.

In addition to his undergraduate degree from the Gabelli School of Business, Daleo holds an MBA in finance from the City University of New York.

— Patrick Verel

 


 

Upcoming At Fordham:

College at 60 Summer Series Brings Great Films to Fordham

Fordham’s College at 60 kicked off its new summer series, Where Great Books Meet Great Movies! on June 5, with the Academy-award-nominated film The Help.

The 2011 comedy-drama film adaptation of Kathryn Stockett’s novel of the same name was the first of four films that will be screened in the 12th Floor Lounge at the Lincoln Center campus. It will be followed by showings of Wings of the Dove,The Name of the Rose and The Grapes of Wrath (pictured above), weekly through June 26.

Screenings will be followed by a lecture and discussion led by Robert Spiegelman, Ph.D., adjunct professor of sociology and social science at Fordham. Spiegelman, a screenwriter and creative producer with several feature film and documentary projects under development, has incorporated film for years as an integral part of all of his courses at Fordham, Long Island University, and the College of Staten Island.

More information can be found on the website, www.fordham.edu/collegeat60.

— Patrick Verel


 

 

This Month in Fordham History…

Amid Personal Grief, a Rising Author Finds a Home at Fordham

In 1846, Fordham gained a thoughtful, well-mannered neighbor who would become a regular visitor to the Jesuit fathers on campus. In June of that year, he moved into a white three-room cottage on Kingsbridge Road, overlooking the campus of Fordham (then named St. John’s College).

When his wife died seven months later, he began the long walks that would lead him to the campus of St. John’s. There, he befriended college president Auguste J. Thebaud, S.J., as well as future president Edward Doucet, S.J., with whom he often walked the campus grounds, unburdening himself and taking a break from his literary efforts.

The Jesuits often gave him free rein in their library, where he would stay late into the night. “He was well informed on all matters” and was “a gentleman by nature and instinct,” Doucet said of the man, who had the now-familiar name of Edgar Allan Poe.

— Chris Gosier

Photos, from left: Wikimedia Commons/Dmadeo; Photo by Janet Sassi; Wikimedia Commons

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College at 60 Summer Series Brings Great Films to Fordham https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/college-at-60-summer-series-brings-great-films-to-fordham-2/ Tue, 05 Jun 2012 15:03:19 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=30930 the-helpFordham’s College at 60 kicked off its new summer series, “Where Great Books Meet Great Movies!” on Tuesday, June 5 with the Academy-award nominated film The Help.

The 2011 comedy-drama film adaptation of Kathryn Stockett’s novel of the same name was the first of four films that will be screened at the 12th Floor Lounge at the Lincoln Center campus. It will be followed by 1 p.m. showings of Wings of the Dove, The Name of the Roseand The Grapes of Wrath.

The screenings are followed by a lecture and discussion led by Robert Spiegelman, Ph.D., adjunct professor of sociology and social science at Fordham. Spiegelman, a screenwriter and creative producer with several feature film and documentary projects under development, has incorporated film for years as an integral part of all of his courses at Fordham, Long Island University and the College of Staten Island.

He will be joined by a two-time Emmy Award-winning writer, director, and producer Jon Goodman. Goodman’s most recent film, Freedom Songs: The Music of the Civil Rights Movement, aired on PBS stations in 2009–2010. He is the author of The Kennedy Mystique: Creating Camelot (National Geographic Books, 2005) and since 2006, he has been an adjunct professor of the arts at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Film Program.

Spiegelman said the films all share thread of being passionate, ethical, cutting edge and relevant to the present moment.

“They’re paired with a books that are essential for good citizenship and the kind of ethical living that is in tune with Fordham’s mission and practice,” he said.

The screenings are open to the public. There is an entrance fee of $20 per event, payable by cash or check at the door.

For more information, visit the College at 60 website.

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College at 60 Summer Series Brings Great Films to Fordham https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/college-at-60-summer-series-brings-great-films-to-fordham-3/ Fri, 01 Jun 2012 19:40:14 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=41259 Fordham’s College at 60 kicks off its new summer series, “Where Great Books Meet Great Movies!” on Tuesday, June 5 with the Academy-award nominated film “The Help.”

The 2011 comedy-drama film adaptation of Kathryn Stockett’s novel of the same name is the first of four films that will be screened at the 12th Floor Lounge at the Lincoln Center campus.  It will be followed by showings of “Wings of the Dove,” “The Name of the Rose” and “The Grapes of Wrath.”

The screenings will be followed by a lecture and discussion led by Robert Spiegelman, Ph.D., adjunct professor of sociology and social science at Fordham. Spiegelman, a screenwriter and creative producer with several feature film and documentary projects under development, has incorporated film for years as an integral part of all of his courses at Fordham, Long Island University and the College of Staten Island.

He will be joined by a two-time Emmy Award-winning writer, director, and producer Jon Goodman. Goodman’s most recent film, “Freedom Songs: The Music of the Civil Rights Movement,” aired on PBS sta¬tions nationwide in 2009–2010. He is the author of The Kennedy Mystique: Creating Camelot (National Geographic Books, 2005) and since 2006, he has been an adjunct professor of the arts at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Film Program.

The screenings are open to the public. There is an entrance fee of $20 per event, payable by cash or check at the door.

For more information, visit their website:

http://www.fordham.edu/academics/colleges__graduate_s/undergraduate_colleg/school_of_profession/pcs_home/nondegree_and_noncre/college_at_sixty/summer_2012_program_82483.asp

–Patrick Verel

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