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    Students recognized at Chapman University for this year’s Sala and Aron Samueli Holocaust Art & Writing Contest
    • March 13, 2026

    Alma Miller, 15, spent her Friday afternoon at Chapman University, where she and the hundreds of middle and high school students who gathered for this year’s Sala and Aron Samueli Holocaust Art & Writing Contest were united under a single artistic theme: “Holding onto Hope.”

    As part of the contest, students were tasked with creating art, film, poetry or prose inspired by testimonies from Holocaust survivors and rescuers. The annual competition saw entries from more than 200 schools across 32 states and six countries.

    “It was so crazy and it was an amazing experience and I’m really proud,” said Miller, a freshman at Shalhevet High School in Los Angeles. It was her first time participating in the national contest, which celebrates its 27th anniversary this year, but Miller nabbed one of the eight first-place prizes for her art submission.

    Alma Miller's entry, inspired by Holocaust survivor Itka Zygmuntowicz.
    Alma Miller’s entry.

    “I was trying to show how she was stuck in this cage and was trapped, but her ability to think to create poems really helped her retain that humanity,” Miller said of her muse, Itka Zygmuntowicz, a Holocaust survivor whose story overlaps with much of Miller’s great-grandmother’s.

    “They grew up a few miles from each other and they were born the same year. That’s why I was originally drawn to this story,” Miller said.

    “I’ve always been someone that loves doing art and this specific competition was really important to me because of that connection,” she said.

    The contest is presented by Chapman University’s Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education in partnership with The 1939 Society, a division of Holocaust Museum LA.

    Along with students from around California and the United States participating, students from Canada, North Macedonia, the Philippines, Poland, Romania and South Africa submitted entries.

    On Friday, Miller presented her piece to the audience, which included several Holocaust survivors who spoke to share their stories.

    “I think it was really nice for me to see how many people showed up,” Miller said. “Maybe for some of these kids it was their first time learning about the Holocaust and hearing survivors’ testimonies.

    “I think that’s important.”

     Orange County Register 

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