KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner ANDREW CUTLER Publisher/Editor ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Editor/Senior Reporter SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2022 A4 Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW We can never forget T here’s a lot about Anneke Bloomfi eld’s story that is heart-wrenching but what remains an enduring theme is a simple motto: We can never forget. Bloomfi eld, an outreach speaker for the Oregon Jewish Museum and Holo- caust Education Center, talked this week at the Pendleton Public Library about her experience during World War II. Her Jewish family suff ered under the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler when German army occupied her home country of the Netherlands in 1940. Bloomfi eld recounted to a packed house unwarranted searches by Nazi soldiers, food shortages and sacrifi ce made by her mother and father as the family struggled to hide its Jewish heritage. Bloomfi eld’s parents sent her away from their home three times in an eff ort to keep her safe and her father even- tually became a member of the Dutch underground resistance movement. Bloomfi eld’s experience as a young child trying to survive under the Nazi regime is a rich and poignant tale of cour- age and perseverance but it is even more important for the lessons it conveys. The war, and the Nazi perse- cution, made a deep impact on Bloomfi eld and her siblings. Bloomfi eld’s story is unique in the sense her persecution by the Nazi’s didn’t occur in one of the Hitler regimes death camps. Yet her tale of oppression should resonate, no matter where and how it occurred. We need, frankly, more tales from individuals like Anneke Bloomfi eld. We need to remember that discrimination and oppression occur everywhere and if allowed to fester it impacts all of us. We remain fortunate as a nation that we still understand that to preserve freedom we must make sacrifi ces that carry a degree of risk. That means sometimes putting our young men and women in harm’s way on distant shores. Fighting oppression should never carry an expiration date and we must ensure stories like Bloomfi eld’s are not forgotten nor dismissed. Her story is a compelling narra- tive but it remains also a cautionary account about how oppression can bloom even within the most seemingly civi- lized societies and grow into a cancer that injures all who encounter it. We must, as a nation, never forget in this critical moment in history we classify memories such as Bloomfi eld’s as tools to help us to fi ght oppression in the future. EDITORIALS Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. LETTERS The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. SEND LETTERS TO: editor@eastoregonian.com, or via mail to Andrew Cutler, 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton, OR 97801 Bentz needs to back school safety talk with action LES ZAITZ OTHER VIEWS n the hours after the deadly school shooting in Texas, only one member of Oregon’s Congressional dele- gation stayed quiet — U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, a Republican from Ontario. The state’s U.S. senators and four other U.S. representatives weighed in, responding to questions or otherwise pushing for action. In the days after 19 children were gunned down in their classroom, much of the country was asking: “How can this be stopped?” Bentz provided no answer for days. He issued no press statements. He posted no comments to his Congressional website. He stayed silent on his offi cial Face- book account. He didn’t respond to questions from the Oregon Capital Chronicle’s report- ers. While the rest of Oregon’s delegation has advanced gun safety ideas, some- times for years, the record shows only one gun-related legislation in Congress that Bentz put his name to. That would have allowed a state’s concealed weap- ons permit to be valid in every other state. That’s not surprising, since he represents vast regions of Oregon where guns are part of life. In his public service as a state repre- sentative, then state senator, and now congressman, Bentz has stood fi rmly behind gun rights, the Second Amend- ment and the National Rifl e Association. During his 2020 campaign for U.S. representative, Bentz posted his personal inventory of guns on his campaign website. “I had and still have my 357 Ruger single six which I bought in 1969. I have a Glock 19 9mm Luger, a Winchester 30-30, a Winchester 22, a rolling block single shot Remington 22 and several other long guns,” he said. He also had a concealed weapons permit, he said. After the Texas shooting, Bentz told I Medford station KTVL, “One of the things that should be done, I’ve recom- mended many times, is that we begin to make sure that our schools are appropri- ately protected.” That Bentz might want to protect schools isn’t surprising, given what’s happened since he took his seat in Congress in January 2021. In 2021, according to Education Week, the country experienced 24 school shootings. “A shooting on Nov. 30, in which a student killed four people and injured seven at an Oxford, Michigan, high school, was the deadliest school shoot- ing since May 2018,” Education Week reported. And the months this year leading up to the Texas school shooting haven’t been any better. A sampling: Jan. 19: One student shoots and wounds another student outside a high school bathroom in Sanford, Florida. Feb. 1: Two students shoot and kill one other student, wound two others at school in Richfi eld, Minnesota. March 15: A 15-year-old boy shoots another teenager at a high school in Yakima, Washington. March 31: A 12-year-old shoots and kills another 12-year-old at a middle school in Greenville, S.C. April 5: A 14-year-old shoots another student in a high school hallway in Erie, Pennsylvania. Bentz made his fi rst formal comment on the Texas shooting that I could fi nd when he posted on Friday, May 27, to his Facebook page. He said the Uvalde shooting was “the very defi nition of evil.” “We must ensure that our schools are provided with necessary resources to protect against attacks such as this,” he said. He asked constituents to join him in “acting, immediately, to improve the security of our schools.” He put up a fence around one action being discussed nationwide — gun safety. “While much must be done to ensure the safety of our citizens, infringing on Constitutional rights is not the answer,” he wrote on his Facebook post. So, what is his solution? There is no readily available record of the school safety actions that Bentz says he has recommended “many times.” His publicly-paid communica- tions director, Knox McCuthen, didn’t respond to emails seeking Bentz’s past proposals and what he was proposing now. The interest in school safety, though, isn’t a priority for the congressman, judging from his record and despite one child after another dying in school shootings since he took on the title of U.S. representative. On his campaign website, Bentz lists 12 issues important to him. Nothing refers to school safety, but that’s where he does call out the Second Amend- ment and off ers up his personal weapons inventory. On his Congressional website, the lead item is: “Afghanistan Resources.” The closest his page comes to school matters is his announcement the day before the Texas shooting: “Bentz Announces Winner of 2022 Congressio- nal Art Competition.” His website includes a search func- tion, but nowhere on Bentz’s page does the phrase “school safety” appear. Bentz has a political reality, of course. At this point, a lot of voters in the 2nd Congressional District expect Bentz to do anything he can to defend their gun rights. Let’s give him that, for argument’s sake. So, then, doesn’t the congressman owe Oregon something more concrete than “don’t touch my guns” to address the school shootings that plague no other country as they do ours? His claims of being focused on school safety are empty. He hasn’t acted. He has, like so many politicians, talked. That’s not good enough. That’s not good enough for 19 chil- dren gone to their graves in Texas. That’s not good enough for the people of Oregon, who have endured their own mass shootings and resulting “thoughts and prayers” solutions. In his Facebook post, he wrote, “There is nothing more important than our children and they must be kept safe.” The time’s here for Bentz to act on those words. ——— Les Zaitz is a veteran editor and inves- tigative reporter, serving Oregon for more than 45 years.