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Who will speak for the victims, and what shall be said?

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  • Who will speak for the victims, and what shall be said?

    Centre Daily Times, PA
    Dec 4 2004

    Who will speak for the victims, and what shall be said?


    What will we say for them? When there are no more survivors of the
    Holocaust, what will we speak in their spirit?

    What will we say in their voices through our voices? How will we make
    them live, when most of them are dying, now, or have died before
    their time? How can we make them live for all time, this generation
    that is dying?

    Noted historian Howard Zinn says this of the Holocaust: "The greatest
    gift the Jews could give the world is not to remember Hitler's
    genocide for exactly what it was, that is, the genocide of Jews, but
    to take what that horrible experience was for Jews and then to apply
    it to all other things that are going on in the world, where huge
    numbers of people are dying for absolutely no reason at all."

    Then we must ask, if given back their life, their health, their
    energy, their hunger for understanding and peace, what would the
    victims of the Holocaust say of the holocausts of today, of the
    anti-Semitism of today, and what would they say, of the words that
    are now spoken for them, of the words their memory brings?

    Indeed, it is true today that the world is experiencing a new wave of
    anti-Semitism, unmatched, some could say, since the Holocaust itself.
    This new energy in anti-Semitic feeling has sometimes been attributed
    to Holocaust denial, Holocaust forgetting, and it is more than ironic
    that along with passionate anti-Semitism, a new wave of Holocaust
    interest has emerged, particularly in the United States, where as
    many as 140,000 Holocaust survivors immigrated after 1948.

    Because a people dead, a generation dead, voices gone or never heard,
    are things very easily manipulated.

    First, why is the Holocaust unique? And why does it continue to
    affect us?

    Noted perhaps for its technological thoroughness, it is obviously a
    horror of our time, but certainly, not the horror of all times. Have
    we not seen such disregard for human life in the Armenian genocide,
    in the Cambodian killing fields, in the slaughter in Bosnia and
    Rwanda, and most recently, and perhaps most relevantly, in Israel's
    occupation of Palestine?

    And to make Americans blush, can we not forget that Hitler's own
    inspiration lay in his knowledge, in what he believed was the
    absolute genocide of Native Americans by the growing United States,
    and the absolute forgetting of this? Can Americans not see the loss
    when something like this is forgotten?

    We must imagine what Holocaust survivors would say about any of these
    terrors -- Holocaust survivors of course meaning more than Jews --
    because we know that gypsies, Russians, homosexuals, the disabled and
    more perished under the Nazis. But what we are really asking is what
    exactly is it that a victim would say to another victim?

    Would they not just give knowing glances and wish, wishing very hard,
    that maybe that their own personal terror really had been unique?
    That with their suffering, perhaps it was the end to all needless
    suffering. Perhaps this thought process is naive, but I think some
    victims, and all who remember victims well, emerge a bit naive, a bit
    idealistic perhaps, a bit wonderfully, idealistic.

    Finkelstein speaks firmly of how he believes the Holocaust is
    exploited, through political and class interests, along with the
    insistence of portraying Jews as the sole victims. And more
    importantly, he believes the Holocaust is being generally used today
    to rationalize Israel's subjugation of the Palestinians.

    He stipulates further that the Holocaust was met mostly with
    indifference in the United States, only until Israel became fully
    entrenched as a U.S. ally after the 1967 war when Israel began
    occupying Sinai, West Bank, Gaza and Golan Heights.

    We must ask then how Holocaust victims themselves would feel about
    having the memory of their suffering exploited in such a way, in the
    interest of deflecting criticism of Israel. How despite a common
    heritage with this nation, we must hope -- no, we must have absolute
    faith -- that these survivors would, have, and will (if there are any
    still alive and able) speak out against any atrocity they see.

    Albert Camus said that it is the job of the thinking people not to be
    on the side of the executioners. If anything, being a victim or being
    in any way influenced by the Holocaust, or by any holocaust, should
    produce this identity, not necessarily an identity as a victim, but
    to have an identity that is based on the ability to identify and act
    out against oppressors.

    We must continue to insist that the victims and survivors of the
    Holocaust, and the victims of any holocaust, would be most pleased,
    most honored, most correctly spoken for when and in the day that we
    will denounce all violence.

    We must apply their voices and their suffering into defending all who
    will ever be threatened with such cruelty.

    And we must know that the fact that the Jewish people were
    slaughtered and oppressed by the Nazis cannot ever be used to
    legitimize any violence or hostility toward other nations (for
    example, Palestine).

    We should restore Holocaust interest to either scholarly or
    humanitarian. And we should always remember cases like this -- cases
    for example, when Israeli Justice Minister Yusef Lapid, a Holocaust
    survivor himself, looked upon a picture of an old Palestinian woman
    sitting on the rubble of what used to be her home, and Lapid admitted
    quite candidly that it reminded him of his own grandmother in the
    Holocaust.

    We must remember this, and realize where the real connections lie,
    not in race or ethnicity, but in bonds of understanding and a belief
    in a common good.

    Grace Kredell is a student in the State College Area High School
    Delta Program. This essay won first place for 11th-grade students in
    the recent Voices of the Holocaust Essay Contest sponsored by the
    State College Choral Society.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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