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  • New word to replace Holocaust wins favor

    New word to replace Holocaust wins favor

    Palm Beach Post (Florida)
    Sunday, April 18, 2004

    By Charles Passy ([email protected]), Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

    When George Lucius Salton tells of his experience as a survivor of the Nazi
    concentration camps, there's no confusion about the details. The fear of
    being executed at any moment. The joy of being liberated. The making of a
    new life in America.

    And so Salton, a retired electrical engineer who lives in Palm Beach
    Gardens, says there should be no confusion about how to refer to this
    seminal event in modern Jewish history, the systematic murder of an
    estimated 6 million Jews by a ruthless German regime.

    "'Holocaust' is understood as the term referring to the destruction of the
    Jews," he says.

    Or is it?

    In recent years, many Jewish and non-Jewish leaders in the religious,
    academic and cultural communities have begun embracing "Shoah," a Hebrew
    word for "destruction," as the term for the Nazi-led genocide of 1933-1945.
    Filmmaker Steven Spielberg chose it as the name for his foundation that
    documents the stories of survivors. The Vatican used it in its report, We
    Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah, recounting the Roman Catholic Church's
    response to the mass slaughter.

    And locally, Rabbi David Goldstein, who heads Temple Beth David in Palm
    Beach Gardens, goes so far as to remove most references to "Holocaust" in
    synagogue literature.

    "We're trying to substitute 'Shoah' across the board," he says.

    The result is nothing short of a linguistic quagmire, particularly as Jews
    throughout the world gather today, designated on the Jewish calendar as Yom
    Hashoah, or Day of the Destruction, to remember the tragedy of the World War
    II era.

    But what is it they're remembering -- the Holocaust or the Shoah?

    The knock against "Holocaust" is twofold. Many object to the word, derived
    from ancient Greek, because it translates as "burnt offering" -- in the
    sacrificial religious sense, according to select scholars. And that leads to
    a horrific connotation when speaking of the atrocities committed against the
    Jews, who were often driven to the gas chambers, then cremated. How could
    their fiery end be considered a sacrifice?

    "If it's a burnt offering to God, then I don't want to know the God at the
    other end," says Michael Berenbaum, a leading scholar based at the
    University of Judaism in Los Angeles.

    But the linguistic issues go deeper. As "Holocaust" seeps into the
    vernacular, the term has become attached not only to other genocides and
    mass slaughters -- in Armenia, Cambodia and elsewhere -- but also to a range
    of other events and movements. In an article for a Jewish publication, Diana
    Cole cited such examples as a People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals'
    "Holocaust on Your Plate" exhibit and SiliconeHolocaust.org, a Web site for
    "breast implant victims."


    Maybe better, but realistic?
    In the process, many argue, all sense of meaning is lost.

    "It has been trivialized so much," says Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel, the
    Jewish author and concentration-camp survivor who popularized the term
    'Holocaust' in the early '60s through his writings.

    By contrast, "Shoah" is a word without negative connotations. And its Hebrew
    connection gives it a special significance, some contend.

    "The way in which you can keep the particularity of the Shoah as a Jewish
    event is to use a Jewish word," says Zev Garber, a Jewish scholar based at
    Los Angeles Valley College who co-wrote a paper, Why Do We Call the
    Holocaust 'the Holocaust,' which helped spark the pro-"Shoah" movement.

    Garber envisions a day when "Shoah" will be as universal as "Holocaust" is
    today. "Give it a quarter of a century," he says.

    To which others say: Be realistic.

    "With all due respect, it's not going to happen," says Berenbaum, who helped
    found the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    It's not that Berenbaum and others don't recognize the problems with
    "Holocaust." It's that it's simply too late to alter the linguistic
    landscape, they say.

    Consider all the "Holocaust" institutions and groups already in existence,
    including the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and countless state and
    regional Holocaust museums. Even Alan Berger, a leading Jewish scholar at
    Florida Atlantic University who says he's troubled by the term, occupies a
    chair in -- what else? -- "Holocaust studies."

    In other words, there may be too many nameplates to change.


    Imperfect but understood
    "'Holocaust' has been the accepted word," says Rabbi Alan Sherman, community
    chaplain with the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County. "It's not perfect,
    but when it's used everyone knows what it refers to, which is the important
    thing."

    That's a point echoed by survivor Salton, who wrote a book, The 23rd Psalm,
    about his experience in the concentration camps. "If somebody opened a
    'Shoah' museum, it wouldn't be understood," he says.

    And Rositta Kenigsberg, who heads the North Miami Beach-based Holocaust
    Documentation and Education Center and is leading the effort to establish a
    South Florida Holocaust museum, goes one step further: If the Jewish
    community gets too caught up in this linguistic fracas, they risk losing
    sight of the real issue -- the memory and lessons of the event itself.

    "I think we're making more of this than there should be," she says.

    But as far as Rabbi Goldstein is concerned, "when you continue to make a
    mistake, you compound the problem from that mistake."

    "To continue using the word 'Holocaust,' we let stand those who want to see
    it as a punishment for the Jews," Goldstein says. "When we take away the
    burnt offering concept, we're left with man's inhumanity to man."

    Still, others say the "burnt offering" religious concept isn't necessarily
    the correct interpretation. True, "holocaust" appears in the Greek
    translation of the Old Testament (or, as some now prefer to call it, the
    Hebrew scriptures). But "holocaust" was also employed before that to denote
    pagan sacrifices, removing it from the Judeo-Christian framework, researcher
    Jon Petrie has noted.

    And in the 20th century, "holocaust" took on variety of meanings before it
    became forever wedded to the crimes of the Nazi era. Often, it simply
    signified a great fire. In his writings, Petrie goes so far as to quote a
    1940 advertisement in the pre-state of Israel Palestine Post for a show by
    one Mandrake the Magician, promising "a flaming holocaust of thrills."


    Right word may not exist
    In the early years of the Cold War, "holocaust" was far more likely to be
    used in conjunction with the threat of nuclear disaster. Petrie has argued
    that it was such usage that prompted Jewish writers, including Wiesel, to
    co-opt the term when referring to Hitler's dreaded "Final Solution."

    "American Jewish writers probably abandoned such words as 'disaster,'
    'catastrophe' and 'massacre' in favor of 'holocaust' in the 1960s because
    'holocaust,' with its evocation of the then actively feared nuclear mass
    death, effectively conveyed something of the horror of the Jewish experience
    during World War II."

    For his part, Wiesel says he used the word for its poetic effect. And while
    he says he was fully aware of the connection with religious sacrifice, he
    thought of it more in metaphysical terms. "This might have been a huge
    cosmic burnt offering," he says.

    In any case, by the '70s, "Holocaust" fully entered into the American
    lexicon, especially after a TV miniseries of the same name drew 120 million
    viewers. In the same year, President Jimmy Carter established a Commission
    on the Holocaust, which led to the creation of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
    Museum.

    In the end, Wiesel says, we may have to accept that when talking about death
    on such a massive scale, words ultimately fail us. He recognizes the issues
    surrounding "Holocaust," but he says that "Shoah" isn't a perfect fit,
    either, noting the word was in use before the death camps. (It was often
    employed in reference to the feared demise of Europe's Jewish population.)

    So how does Wiesel speak of the unspeakable? He thinks back to the most
    infamous of the camps.

    "I use the word, 'Auschwitz,' " Wiesel says. "It is something singular
    and specific."
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