As a survivor of the Holocaust, Dora Zaidenweber felt a responsibility and an obligation to share her story.
Over many decades, she told thousands about finding the hope to endure Auschwitz's horrors — giving her testimony across the Midwest at schools and museums, over Zoom and, just six months before she died on Sept. 21, before Minnesota legislators at the State Capitol.
"Mass murders can happen, and people have to understand to learn to live with each other," Zaidenweber, who was 99, told lawmakers in March. "It is only through understanding and education that they know who their neighbors are, who the people they are living with and learn to live with."
Ultimately, state lawmakers passed an education bill that included requiring Minnesota students to learn about the Holocaust and other genocides starting in 2026.
"Dora was a force that winter day, there's no doubt in my and my JCRC colleagues' minds that her words, her presence, and her voice changed minds in that packed Capitol hearing room," said Laura Zelle, director of Holocaust education for the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas. "I will remember Dora not only for the darkness she endured, but for the light she brought into the world, ensuring that the lessons of history will guide us toward a more compassionate and just future."
Zaidenweber was born in Radom, Poland. Along with her immediate family and her future husband, Jules, she survived being forced into a Polish ghetto and sent to Nazi forced labor and death camps. Her extended family did not survive, and her mother died just after the war. In 1950, Jules, Dora, her father and her brother David all immigrated to the United States and settled in Minneapolis.

Two years after coming to America, despite having her high school education cut short by the war, she earned a master's degree in economics from the University of Minnesota.
For several years, Zaidenweber, who worked as an accountant and raised two children, didn't talk much about what she experienced during the war, said her grandson Jonah Krischer. When her eldest was in high school, however, she started sharing her story.