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Analysis: Holocaust Memorial Day

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  • Analysis: Holocaust Memorial Day

    Religious Intelligence Ltd, UK
    Jan 28 2008


    Analysis: Holocaust Memorial Day
    Monday, 28th January 2008. 2:30pm

    By: Rabbi Rachel Montagu.

    In 1998 middle school students at Whitwell, a small town in
    Tennessee, were bemused by the sheer scale of what they were learning
    about the Holocaust in a course on tolerance.

    Because during WWII some Norwegians wore a loop of metal as tacit
    protest against the Nazis, they decided to collect a paper clip for
    each Jewish victim of the Holocaust so they could see what 6 million
    of anything looks like. After publicity about this project, many
    people (including Presidents Clinton and Bush) sent paper clips. Then
    they established the Children's Holocaust Memorial; a railway goods
    coach like the ones which ferried Jews to the camps, containing 11
    million paper clips, 6 million for the Jewish victims, 5 million for
    the non-Jewish victims including Roma and disabled. Any commemoration
    which ignores the Jewishness of many of the victims is unrealistic
    but so is any that suggests the Nazis murdered only Jews.

    The mind-boggling enormity of the Holocaust is a difficulty for us
    all. Lyn Smith's anthology `Forgotten Voices of the Holocaust'
    demonstrates that many of those going through it were also full of
    disbelief that such things could be happening, such cruelty and
    horror. Many theologians have wrestled with the difficulty of
    offering any explanation. Rabbi Eliezer Berkovitz talks of God's face
    hidden at what human beings do with their God-given free will. But
    the impossibility of understanding the Holocaust makes all the more
    urgent the need to remember it.

    Holocaust Memorial Day takes place on January 27, the anniversary of
    the liberation of Auschwitz. After it was instituted in Britain and
    some other European countries in 2001, the United Nations passed a
    resolution in 2005 designating January 27 International Holocaust
    Memorial Day. It is often but mistakenly suggested that the Jewish
    community lobbied for its creation.

    Actually the government initially proposed it and the Jewish
    community reacted cautiously. Jews commemorate the Holocaust on Yom
    HaShoah, Holocaust Day, which usually falls in April near the
    anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Why another day?
    Eventually the Jews in Britain realized the importance of a national
    opportunity for everyone to reflect on the significance of the
    Holocaust and of all the other genocides commemorated. It is good
    that this year the Muslim Council of Great Britain will be joining in
    the commemorations.

    How, if the Holocaust is beyond comprehension, can we commemorate it
    before God? Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks described the Holocaust as
    `a mystery wrapped in silence'. Rabbi Irving Greenberg wrote: `... over
    a million innocent children were savagely killed. No statement,
    theological or otherwise, should be made that would not be credible
    in the presence of burning children. Any easy affirmation of God
    would appear to mock the burning children. Any easy denial of God
    would appear to turn the children's deaths into a gigantic travesty.'


    This sets a formidable challenge for any Holocaust Memorial Day
    service. For those daunted by the prospect of creating such a
    liturgy, The Council of Christians and Jews has produced resources.

    Ever since Abraham asked God, `should not the judge of all the world
    do justice?' Judaism has had a tradition of prayer that challenges
    God. A well-known story describes how one night, in a packed
    concentration camp blockhouse, the prisoners put God on trial and
    declared God guilty of permitting their terrible situation -- then
    prayed the evening service. A similar story by Elie Wiesel describes
    a group of prisoners in Auschwitz who decided that they would eat
    their usual meagre rations on Yom Kippur because fasting would hasten
    their deaths. Their leader, who had encouraged the rest to eat,
    fasted, later explaining that he had acted from defiance not
    obedience: `Here and now the only way to accuse him is by praising
    him.'

    A story by Zvi Kolitz, titled Yossel Rakover's Appeal to God
    describes the last moments of a fighter in the Warsaw Ghetto: `It is
    a time when God has veiled his countenance from the world ... I cannot
    extol You for the deeds you tolerate. I bless You and extol You for
    the very fact of Your existence. ... You may take from me all I cherish
    and hold dear in the world... - I will believe in You, I will always
    love You!'

    If one of the strongest responses to the Holocaust was to say, `Never
    Again' to exterminating people because of their race, how are we to
    understand those genocides which have happened since and the rape and
    torture now happening in Darfur? Rabbi Hugo Gryn said that the real
    question was `Not where was God in Auschwitz but where was man?'

    The Sufi Muslim Council, Faith Matters and the Three Faiths Forum
    have a current project, Bridging Beliefs, with the theme Never Again.
    Up and down the country, meetings took place where a Jewish Holocaust
    survivor and a Muslim Bosnia survivor described the atrocities they
    had experienced because of their faith to a Jewish and Muslim
    audience to create better relations between communities and help to
    prevent potential deaths.

    Yad VaShem UK has a project called Guardian of the Memory. Churches,
    schools and individuals undertake to commemorate annually the death
    of one person who was killed in the Holocaust. The inspiration was
    David Berger, a boy who wrote shortly before the Nazis killed him in
    Vilna in 1941, `I should like someone to remember that there once
    lived a person named David Berger.'

    The Holocaust and other genocides unquestionably show human beings at
    their most vile but some people responded with great spiritual
    nobility to the Holocaust's challenge. Those who risked their lives
    to hide and help Jews, described in books like Michael Gilbert's The
    Righteous. Those who refused to be dehumanized or to cease to
    practice their religion, described in Eliezer Berkowitz' book With
    God in Hell: Judaism in the Ghettoes and Death Camps. Those who wrote
    this prayer found at Ravensbruck: `Eternal, remember not only the men
    of good will, but also those of ill will. But do not remember all the
    suffering they have inflicted upon us. Remember rather the fruits we
    have brought, thanks to this suffering: our comradeship, our loyalty,
    our humility, the courage, the generosity, the greatness of heart
    that has grown out of this. And when they come to judgment, let all
    the fruits we have borne be their forgiveness.'

    Jane Clements has written about the importance of education about the
    Holocaust. Nothing can justify the Holocaust, nothing can excuse the
    Holocaust, no one can comprehend the Holocaust, but if we can learn
    something from it, then that may go somewhere to redeeming what
    happened, and ensure that no one ignores or denies the Holocaust and
    the other genocides, those of the Armenians, Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda
    and Darfur, commemorated on this day.

    Yad VaShem UK Guardian of the Memory Campaign email:
    office@yadvashem,org,uk 020 7543 5402

    Council of Christians and Jewswww.ccj.org.uk

    Holocaust Memorial Day Trust www.hmd.org.uk
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