When I was a kid, I took history hard. I’d jerk awake at night, disturbed by visions of slaves lashed to posts and whipped to their deaths by overseers. Or by Nazi soldiers throwing babies in the air and shooting them before they hit the ground.
How could this be?
This question that I asked over and over sent me to an English translation of Mein Kampf. As a junior high kid, I didn’t understand all I read. But my main take was that Hitler viewed pretty much everyone else as a tool to be used or as a problem to be removed.
He thought he was it—at the center. That what he wanted mattered. And that what others wanted didn’t.
Which sounded just a little too close for comfort.
I was a purpose-driven kind of kid, and not above using my six younger sisters and brothers to accomplish my goals.
This sometimes ran afoul of my parents’ teachings. Hard-won understandings that had been passed through generations of Anabaptists, who had been hunted and burned at the stake-to be demütig, humble—to look out for the interests of others. Even my enemies. Even my brothers and sisters.
History gave me nightmares. But it also showed me myself. And made me sympathetic to other groups who also suffered. To Jewish people who’ve been displaced and harassed and mass murdered. To African Americans who were kidnapped by the millions, forced into ships, thrown into slavery, and later marginalized by segregation, economic strictures, and racial injustice.
Years later, when I became a teacher, I remembered how I had grown from this trauma-by-proxy. And I didn’t shy from showing suffering to my students. Photographs from around the world. Stories about kids who soldiered and mined coal and worked in factories. Diagrams of slave ships. My students wrote papers about the Holocaust and read Night by Elie Wiesel.
Did some of them have nightmares? Likely.
But I hope many of them still ask themselves a second question, one I asked myself as a student, and still ask—What would I do if . . .










