From the DW:
“Holocaust
Remembrance Day marks 25 years”
Since 1996,
survivors of the Nazi regime and world leaders have been invited to address the
German Bundestag each year on January 27 to commemorate the Holocaust. Often,
they focus on contemporary issues. Genocide: Is this the appropriate word to
describe the systematic annihilation of 6 million Jews between 1939 and 1945?
Clearly, it does not go far enough. In Israel, "Shoah," meaning
"catastrophe" or "great misfortune," is used to describe
the event. And outside the Jewish state, this crime against humanity is called
the Holocaust, derived from the Greek for "sacrificially burned." The
attempt to adequately put this betrayal of humanity perpetrated by Germans into
words will always be a challenge. This is also reflected in the official
designation of the "Day of Remembrance for the Victims of National
Socialism," which was introduced by then-German President Roman Herzog. At
the launch, President Herzog said that "Victims of the Holocaust"
would have been "too narrow a term, as Nazi racial policies affected more
people than just the Jews." The chosen date was January 27, the day the
Nazi extermination camp Auschwitz was liberated by Soviet soldiers in 1945. On
this day in 1998, Israeli historian Yehuda Bauer addressed the Bundestag, the
German parliament. Bauer, who had been born in Prague in 1926, recalled other
genocides that shaped the 20th century: Rwanda in 1994, Cambodia from 1975-79
and Armenia in 1915-16. All of these genocides were perpetrated in specific,
although sometimes large, territories. But Bauer said "the murder of Jews
was universal, intended to be worldwide." And he warned that it could
happen again, certainly not in the same form, but perhaps in a very similar
way. "And I can't tell you who will be the Jews and who will be the
Germans the next time around," Bauer warned.
Elie Wiesel:
'How to understand the cult of hatred and death?' In 2000, for the first
time, an Auschwitz survivor addressed members of parliament and guests on the
memorial day: Elie Wiesel. "I speak without hatred or
bitterness," the Romanian-born US-naturalized writer said. "Will my
words hurt you? How can you understand the cult of hatred and death that
reigned in your country?" Wiesel did not believe in collective
guilt, he told his mostly-German audience, but at the same time he believed
there was an issue with drawing a line under the past. "Those who try to
obscure the memory of the victims are killing them a second time." Then
in 2001, Johannes Rau, who had replaced Roman Herzog as German president,
delivered the commemorative speech. The event came under the shadow of growing
right-wing extremist groups in Germany, but also among burgeoning discussions
about German guilt and responsibility. More than half a century after the end
of World War II, Germany had just agreed to compensate forced laborers under
the Third Reich to the tune of almost €5 billion ($6.07 billion). A debate was
also raging around the construction of a Holocaust Memorial in Berlin. Increasingly,
Germany has seen attacks on people with a migration background and living in
refugee shelters, Rau warned. Violent right-wing extremism must be fought
politically and legally, he added: "After all, human dignity is not only
in danger when houses are set on fire and people are chased through the
streets."
Bronislaw
Geremek: 'People are always next' In 2002, when Holocaust survivor and former
Polish Foreign Minister Bronislaw Geremek spoke at the ceremony, the world was
still reeling from the September 11, 2001 terror attacks on the United States.
Contemporary history had not closed the "chapter of hatred," Geremek
said, and he called for "collective, international action." He
drew a clear line from Nazi crimes to genocides after 1945, right up to the
present day. The world should not have stood helpless and powerless when books
were burned in Germany or cultural monuments were destroyed in Afghanistan.
"It is always the people who come next," Geremek said.
Shimon Peres
warns of threat of Iran Every year until 2007, survivors of concentration
camps spoke on the Day of Remembrance for the Victims of National Socialism.
The Spanish writer Jorge Semprun and the first president of the European
Parliament, Simone Veil, looked optimistically forward to the eastward
enlargement of the European Union. For the first time in the long history of
wars and conquests, the unification of Europe was not taking place by force,
Veil said. "It is difficult to grasp the scale of the moral victory
that is the accession of the new member states from the Eastern Bloc, which is
taking place in freedom and peacefully and democratically," Veil said. In
2010, Shimon Peres became the first president of Israel to deliver the
commemorative speech at the Reichstag building in Berlin (Reuven Rivlin became
the second in 2020). Peres urgently warned of the threat to his country from
weapons of mass destruction that are in the "irresponsible hands" of
"people who are insane." There was no doubt whom he was referring to:
Israel's enemy Iran. To prevent a second Shoah, "it is up to us to
teach our children to respect human life and to keep peace with other
countries," he said. In 1994, Peres had received the Nobel Peace Prize,
together with former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the then-head of
the Palestine Liberation Organization, Yasser Arafat.
Sinto Zoni
Weisz deplores antiziganism in Europe In 2011, Zoni Weisz was the guest
speaker. Born in 1937 in The Hague in the Netherlands, Weisz is a Sinto
Holocaust survivor. He lost most of his family in extermination camps. The
genocide of the Sinti and Roma peoples was the "forgotten Holocaust,"
Weisz said. Half a million men, women and children were killed. But Weisz said
society had learned almost nothing from it, "otherwise it would deal with
us more responsibly today." Weisz accused Italy and France, along
with eastern European countries like Romania and Bulgaria, of treating their
minorities "inhumanely." He claimed that in Hungary, right-wing
extremists regularly attack Jews, Sinti and Roma people. "We are
Europeans, after all, and we must have the same rights as all other residents,
with equal opportunities as they apply to every other European," he said.
One year later, in 2012, Weisz repeated his accusations at the unveiling of the
Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism— right next to the
Reichstag building in Berlin.
Holocaust
survivors praise Germany's open-door policy Since hundreds of thousands of
refugees from countries in Africa and Asia ravaged by civil war began to arrive
in Europe, this topic has also played a role in the annual commemorative
speeches. In 2016, Ruth Klüger, a literary scholar and Holocaust
survivor from Austria, paid tribute to Germany's opening of its borders to
around a million refugees. The country that had been responsible for the
"worst crimes of the century" had won the "applause of the
world," she said. She was one of the many outsiders "who went from
astonishment to admiration." In 2018, German-British cellist Anita
Lasker-Wallfisch echoed these thoughts. For Jews, she says, the borders had
been sealed during the Nazi era, rather than opening up as they did in Germany
in 2015, "thanks to the incredibly generous, courageous, human gesture
that was made here." The musician was forced to play in the
so-called girls' orchestra in Auschwitz, and she had sworn "never again to
set my feet on German soil." But she did not regret her change of heart:
Hatred is a poison, "and in the end, you poison yourself."
The 25th Day of
Remembrance for the Victims of National Socialism is due to take place on
Wednesday, January 27, 2021. Two guest speakers have been invited to the
Bundestag: Charlotte Knobloch and Marina Weisband. One is 88, the other 33.
Knobloch, president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany until 2010, was
saved from deportation to the Theresienstadt concentration camp. Weisband is a
Green Party politician and publicist. Both women are united by their Jewish
faith — and their commitment to fight anti-Semitism.
^ It has been
76 years since the end of the Holocaust in Germany and the rest of Europe so only
having 25 years of a Holocaust Remembrance Day in Germany and most of the rest of
Europe isn’t that good. For 51 years there was little to no mention of the mass
killings and the Nazis that murdered innocent men, women and children lived
openly in Germany in every level of German Society from the top-down. Germany
and the Germans themselves only started to focus attention on the Holocaust
once the 3rd Generation of Germans (those whose Grandparents or Great-Grandparents
participated in it) came into positions of power and influence and the 1st
and 2nd Generations of Germans (those that participated in the
Holocaust themselves and their children) either were dying in large numbers
from old age or were retiring. Germany should focus not only on what they did
from 1933-1945 but also what they did from 1945-1990s since that is also a dark
stain on their country. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/holocaust-remembrance-day-marks-25-years/a-56349754
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