Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Holocaust message: 'We must never forget'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Holocaust message: 'We must never forget'

    Summit Daily News, CO
    April 18 2004

    Holocaust message: 'We must never forget'


    JANE STEBBINS
    April 18, 2004


    DILLON - Jews and Christians alike were reminded never to forget the
    tragedy that was the Holocaust during a Yom HaShoah observance at
    Lord of the Mountains Lutheran Church in Dillon Sunday.

    The observance was part of Synagogue of the Summit services to
    remember, reflect and commemorate the worst genocidal event of the
    20th century.

    After six yahrzeit candles were lighted by members of the synagogue,
    Rabbi Elliot Baskin of Beth Evergreen told a Christmas story of a
    Jewish boy who agreed to help an elderly woman carry a bag of wooden
    blocks home to heat her house. As he left her house, she wished him a
    merry Christmas.

    The side trip made him late, and his parents berated him for his
    actions. His father then returned with the boy to the woman's home,
    and as his father shouted at the old woman, she yelled, "Don't shoot!
    Don't shoot!" As she pleaded, her sleeve slipped back on her arm,
    revealing blue numbers tattooed on her forearm.

    The walk home was the only one in which the boy had ever seen his
    father cry.

    "For whom did he cry?" Baskin said. "His pain? Hers? Were his tears
    his only expression? We still have yet to come to terms with the
    Holocaust."

    The only way people will, he said, is to understand the facts, renew
    one's religious commitment and make sure such an event never happens
    again. That will be difficult as Holocaust survivors die over time.

    One such survivor shared his experiences at the services, outlining
    the list of people within his family who had died and the
    difficulties the rest had to overcome. The man, who lives part-time
    in Summit County, declined to give his name, saying he wants to live
    his life in peace.

    His story was anything but peaceful.

    The Hungary-born man was 14 years old when the hell of a systematic
    elimination of Jews began in Budapest, he said.

    His grandfather was pulled from his sick bed, but died in a railroad
    car on the way to Auschwitz; his body was tossed on the side of the
    rails.

    Two uncles left in 1941 for Israel; other family members hid in
    cellars.

    His sister was forced to build trenches, and his father survived two
    years in a camp in Siberia. His parents were convicted of trumped-up
    charges of capitalism because they owned a butcher shop, and served a
    sentence in Dachau before his father was liberated. His mother was on
    one of the last transports to Auschwitz, where she died.

    The man himself shared a ghetto apartment with numerous other people,
    and was the brunt of abuse - spitting, rock-throwing and fights - by
    other kids.

    He was able to overcome, however, going on to become an engineer and
    moving to the United States 40 years ago.

    Another challenge facing Jews is growing anti-Semitism in the world,
    particularly by hate groups that try to convince people the genocide
    never happened, Baskin said.

    The list of lies is astonishing, Baskin said. The revisionists say
    the ovens in which millions were killed were actually used to bake
    bread, Anne Frank's story was fabricated, testimony at the Nuremberg
    trials was coerced and the toxic gases used to kill people was
    actually being made to eradicate mice.

    "We Jews have many frailties," Baskin said. "Amnesia is not one of
    them."

    The Jewish people, he said, are a nation of survivors, although there
    are still fewer Jews in the world than there were before the
    Holocaust. The ones killed in Auschwitz, Dachau and other places
    would comprise a line from Denver to Durango.

    "The Nazis tried to destroy every Jew, and they came very close to
    success," he said. "And the U.S. knew about the killings and chose to
    do nothing. These facts need to be shared."

    He and others questioned why the U.S. and European nations ignored
    the killing fields of Khmer Rouge in Cambodia in the 1980s, the
    second Armenian massacre of 1.5 million in 1915-16 and, more
    recently, the genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda.

    "Why do these destructions evoke so little response in an age when we
    know?" Baskin said. "Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat
    it."



    Those who perished

    Poland/Soviet Union 4,830,000

    Hungary 400,000

    Czechoslovakia 280,000

    Germany 125,000

    Netherlands 106,000

    France 83,000

    Austria 65,000

    Greece 65,000

    Yugoslavia 60,000

    Rumania 40,000

    Belgium 24,000

    Italy 7,500

    Norway 760

    Luxembourg 700



    A brief history

    March 20, 1933: The first concentration camp at Dachau is
    established.

    June 15, 1938: 1,500 German Jews are sent to concentration camps.

    November 9-10, 1938: "Night of the Broken Glass," or Kristallnacht,
    destroys Jewish synagogues and businesses; 30,000 Jews interned in
    camps.

    January 30, 1939: Hitler declares that world war will mean the
    "annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe."

    May 15, 1939: Ravensbruck, the first women's camp, is established.

    September 9, 1939: World War II begins.

    January 1940: First experimental gassing of Jews and other
    "undesirables" occurs.

    April 27: Heinrich Himmler orders the establishment of Auschwitz in
    Oswiecim, Poland.

    March 1, 1941: Himmler travels to Auschwitz and orders additional
    facilities and the construction of Birkenau (Auschwitz II).

    December 11, 1941: United States declares war on Germany.

    February 15, 1941: First people are killed with Zyklon B in
    Auschwitz.

    March 20, 1941: Farmhouse renovated as gas chambers in
    Auschwitz-Birkenau.

    July 19, 1941: Heinrich Himmler orders complete extermination of
    Polish Jews by the end of the year.

    MarchÐJune, 1943: Four gas chambers and crematoria are operational in
    Auschwitz-Birkenau.

    December 1943: First transport of Austrian Jews to Auschwitz takes
    place.

    May 1944: First transport of Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz takes place.

    August 2 1944: A Gypsy family camp in Auschwitz is liquidated (2,897
    prisoners).

    May 7Ð8, 1945: V-E Day; Germany surrenders.

    http://www.summitdaily.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040418/NEWS/104180007&rs=1
Working...
X