Yom HaShoah – Holocaust Memorial Day, 26th Nissan
5779
1st May, 2019
Yesterday, I sat on our veranda, the sun was shining on the
panorama of Jerusalem before me, the rehearsal for the Independence Day
fly-past of Israeli Air Force aeroplanes overhead, the flowers were bright red
and the blue and white Israeli flag was blowing in the breeze. This is our
revenge for the Holocaust I thought.
It doesn't bring back Zvi's family who perished, but it
gives his Israeli family a future.
As you know I always look on the bright side but my fears
for our Diaspora terrify me. The writing is on the wall, the cartoons are
reminiscent of Der Sturmer and anti-Semitic incidents are up by 17%. The word
hate is overused and young people, whose natural instinct is to fight for the
underdog, are being indoctrinated by lies and half-truths, to believe the
Jewish State is guilty of war crimes. Today as dusk falls we will honour those
who died, those who fought and those who survived the unimaginable, but have we
really remembered?
If you recall, on Purim we are taught to drink enough so
that we cannot differentiate between Mordechai and Haman. Why? It's obvious, so
that our minds will be unadulterated by hatred. We must be the builders not the
destroyers, we must pull together irrespective of our denomination, persuasion
leaning or preferences. It's time to remember that those who perished were
killed because they were Jews, no-one cared whether they were observant or not.
They wore the Yellow Star to show they were the same as each other but
different to everyone else. They were beaten and beaten down before they were
rounded up and sent to their deaths or worse. Worse?
Let me tell you about an incredible man who passed away this
week, Menachem Mendel Taub, was born to a Hasidic dynasty in Transylvania,
Romania in 1923. As a young man, Menachem Mendel was subjected to the heinous
experiments of Dr Mengele, which left him unable to have children or grow the
beard appropriate to his calling. Menachem Mendel went on to become the Kaliver
Rebbe, a man of exceptional kindness and empathy, a man who loved. He married
and adopted two daughters and he and his wife came on Aliya to Israel in 1962.
The Rebbe never spoke a word of vengeance, never became angry at his fate, he
became one of the greatest and beloved teachers of Judaism. He passed away at
the age of 96 leaving behind him a legacy of love for his people. His revenge
was living and loving.
In a very short while the Eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day
will begin. We will light a memorial candle at home.
The shops, restaurants and entertainment close, the
television broadcasts movies about the Shoah and Survivors give testimonies so
that we, their children, will know and never forget. Tomorrow morning, at 10:00
a siren will begin its keening wail as Israel stands to attention, reads the
psalms and the sight of drivers halting their usual helter skelter down the
highways stopping where they are and standing beside their vehicles, heads
bowed to honour those who perished. Buses allow their passengers to alight, to
stand beside the bus, people in the street stop their hurry scurry and we are
one people in mourning.
I beg of you, dear friends all over the world, do not be
complacent. I know you have good lives, but the winds of change are blowing
very cold at the moment. What you do now, yes you, can change the entire
situation. If you, each and every one of you write letters until your hands
hurt and if you have influence please ensure that the advertisers of the New
York Times use their influence. Yes the New York Times, the newspaper that
concealed the story of the Concentration Camps…………..
I want to bring you songs that express hope despite the
implications of the day.
Hai – Live. Some 600 Holocaust Survivors and their families
gathered at Beit AviChai in Jerusalem to sing with Koolulam https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vuh1-jDi7Qw
Yaacov Shwekey singing "We Are a Miracle"
expresses everything we were, are and will be https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmyKFLQDHns
El Maleh Rachamim – God full of compassion, the song for
those who perished, sung by Shai Abrahamson at Birkenau Concentration
Camp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ418dhkVCk
Stand proud, stand tall and never ever forget.
With love from our verandah, overlooking Jerusalem, the
Capital of the Jewish State to which we returned, built and thrived. We cannot
change the past, although we must never forget it, but we can change the
future. Remember – we are a miracle.
Sheila
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