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In the rather delightful book
"The Little Prince,"
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there is a quotation which says
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"It's only with the heart
that one can see rightly.
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What is essential is invisible."
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And while the author wrote these words
sitting in a comfortable chair,
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somewhere in the United States,
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I learned this very same lesson
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miles away in a filthy, dirty barrack
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in an extermination camp in Poland.
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It isn't the value or the size of a gift
that truly matters,
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it is how you hold it in your heart.
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When I was six years old,
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my mother, my father, my sister and myself
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left Jew-hating Germany
and we went to Yugoslavia.
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And we were in Yugoslavia
for seven happy years,
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and then Germany invaded Yugoslavia
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and we suddenly were persecuted again,
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and I had to go into hiding.
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And I was hiding for roughly two years,
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with a couple who had worked
for the resistance movement.
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And I developed films
and I made enlargements.
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One day, when I was 15 years old,
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I was arrested by the gestapo
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and beaten up,
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and, for two months,
dragged through various prisons,
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and eventually, I ended up
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in a 150-year-old fortress
in Czechoslovakia,
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which the Nazis had converted
into a concentration camp.
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I was there for 10 months.
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I laid railroad tracks,
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I exterminated vermin,
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I made baskets,
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and after 10 months,
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about 2,000 of us
were loaded into cattle cars,
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the doors were closed,
and we were shipped east.
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For three days, we traveled like that,
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and when we were unloaded,
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we were smelling of urine and of feces,
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and we found ourselves
in the Auschwitz extermination camp.
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A camp that, by that time,
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had murdered already
over one million people,
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and sent them through
the chimney into the sky.
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We arrived, we were stripped
of all of our properties,
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whatever we had,
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and were given striped uniforms,
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were given a tattoo on our arms,
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and we also were given the message
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that we would be there
for exactly six months.
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And after that, we would leave the camp.
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Through the chimney.
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We were assigned to different barracks.
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And the barracks were filled
with wooden bunks,
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six people on each level,
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three people sleeping in one direction
and three in the other direction,
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so whichever way you slept,
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you always had
a pair of feet in your face.
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The man next to me
was an extremely nice gentleman
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and he introduced himself
as Mr. Herbert Levine.
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Mr. Levine was kind and polite to me.
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One day, when I came back
from a work assignment,
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I climbed up,
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I was at the top level
of the three-tier bunk,
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and there was Mr. Levine
with a deck of cards.
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And he was shuffling these cards.
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And I couldn't understand it, you know,
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having a deck of cards in Auschwitz
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was like finding a gorilla
in your bathroom.
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(Laughter)
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You know, "What is he doing there?"
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And then Mr. Levine turned to me
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and offered me the deck,
and said, "Pick a card."
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So I picked a card
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and he performed a card trick for me.
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He performed a miracle.
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And I'd never seen a card trick before,
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and the man who performed it
was sitting right there.
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And then Mr. Levine did the unthinkable.
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He actually explained the trick to me.
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And the words got burned into my brain.
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And I remembered every single word,
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and from that day on,
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I practiced that trick every day.
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Although I didn't have any cards.
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I just kept on practicing.
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About three weeks later,
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the entire camp, with the exception
of a couple hundred of us,
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were sent to the gas chambers.
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I was sent to another camp
where I worked in the stables,
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and then, in January 1945,
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when the Russians advanced,
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60,000 of us were sent on a death march.
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And we walked for three days, on and off,
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and in the middle of the winter,
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and by the time we arrived
at a railroad siding,
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out of the 60,000 people,
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15,000 had died.
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And the rest of us were loaded
into open railroad cars,
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and for four days, shipped all the way
from Poland down to Austria.
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And we found ourselves in the death camp,
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a concentration camp called Mauthausen,
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which again was built like a fortress.
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And at that point, the SS abandoned us,
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and there was no food there,
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and there were thousands
and thousands of bodies there.
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I slept for three days next to a dead man,
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just to get his ration
of a tablespoon of moldy bread.
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And two days before
the end of the war, May 5,
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we were liberated by American forces.
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At that time, I was 17 years old,
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and I weighed 64 pounds.
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And I hitchhiked back to Yugoslavia.
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And when I came back to Yugoslavia,
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there was communism there,
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there was no family there,
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and there were no friends there.
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I stayed there for two years,
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and after two years,
I managed to escape to England.
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And when I came to England,
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I couldn't speak English,
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I had no education, I had no skills.
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I started working,
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and about a year
after I arrived in England,
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I bought myself a deck of cards.
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And for the very first time,
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I actually performed the trick
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that was shown to me in Auschwitz
on top of a bunk bed.
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And it worked.
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It worked beautifully.
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And I showed it to some friends of mine,
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and they loved it.
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And I went to a magic store
and I bought some magic tricks
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and I showed them to my friends,
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and I bought some more magic tricks
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and I showed it to them.
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And then I bought some magic books,
and I bought some more magic books.
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There's a very, very thin line
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between a hobby and insanity.
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(Laughter)
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Anyway, I got married
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and I came to the United States,
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and one of the first jobs that I had
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demanded from me to speak
to small groups of people.
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And I managed it, I was very good at it.
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And then, 25 years ago, I retired.
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And I started speaking in schools.
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And the only reason
why I could speak in schools
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is because a very friendly man
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showed a rather scared kid a card trick
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in a concentration camp.
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This man who showed it to me, Mr. Levine,
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had been a professional magician.
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He worked in Germany,
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and when he came to Auschwitz,
the SS knew who he was,
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so they gave him some cards,
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they gave him a piece of string,
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they gave him some dice,
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and he performed for them.
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And then he also taught some of them.
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He survived the war,
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but his wife and his son died.
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He came to the United States
and performed in various venues,
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but I never met him again.
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But the trick that he showed me
stayed with me,
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and enabled me to go around schools
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and try to make this world
just a little bit better.
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So if you ever know somebody
who needs help,
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if you know somebody who is scared,
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be kind to them.
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Give them advice,
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give them a hug,
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teach them a card trick.
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Whatever you are going to do,
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it's going to be hope for them.
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And if you do it at the right time,
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it will enter their heart
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and it will be with them
wherever they go, forever.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)