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When Holocaust analogies run amok

 
 
 

Charedi use of Shoah images is not acceptable behavior

There was a time when no one living in Israel needed a reminder of what was at stake when the Jewish state was created in 1948 in the aftermath of World War II and the Shoah. After our near-ruinous encounter with European anti-Semitism, Israelis and Jews the world over knew that the survival of the Jewish people depended on the ability to have a home to return to.

There was also a time when the words “Hitler,” “Nazi,” and “Gestapo” were not thrown about recklessly, when images of the emaciated inmates of Nazi concentration camps were a reminder to the Jewish people and the world at large of the terrible turn of events that led to the death of six million Jews and millions of others in the Holocaust.

The uniqueness of the Holocaust was what made the State of Israel such a powerful answer to those who attempted to annihilate the Jews. The memory of the Shoah would ensure that the mass genocide that befell European Jewry would never happen again. Indeed, the message of “Never Again” redefined Jewish experience and peoplehood in the latter half of the 20th century.

Over time, however, we have found the need to remind others — and sometimes ourselves — of the importance of this experience and of the need to protect the memory of the Shoah from those who would distort it. That is why we have felt it necessary to battle efforts to undermine or trivialize the history of the Holocaust. It is why we have worked to expose Holocaust deniers. And it is why we repeatedly speak out when the Shoah becomes grist for inappropriate comparisons, or when such words as “Nazi” or “Hitler” are misused to wage political attacks, or are trivialized in popular culture.

Yet never did I think we would have to speak out about the abject trivialization of the Shoah by a group of Jews living in Israel. That is exactly what happened this month, however, when a group of charedim protested following efforts by secular Israelis to roll back gender segregation on some bus lines by dressing up in concentration camp garb and wearing yellow Stars of David inscribed with the word “Jude.”

The scene was both an aberration and an outrage. This was blatant, in-your-face Holocaust trivialization on a level that until now we rarely have witnessed in Israeli society.

For decades, Israelis and Jews around the world have worked to protect the memory of the Shoah. We built Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. In the United States, we founded the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. Today, there is even a Holocaust memorial in Berlin, Germany.

We worked hard with like-minded righteous gentiles and governments to protect and preserve the sites in Europe most closely associated with the Shoah, including the concentration camps, the deportation sites, the mass graves, and the evidence of once-thriving Jewish communities. We created and stressed educational efforts, such as Echoes and Reflections — the multimedia Holocaust curriculum developed by the Anti-Defamation League in partnership with Yad Vashem and the University of Southern California Shoah Foundation Institute — to ensure that the lessons of the Shoah are passed on to future generations.

We also battled efforts to undermine or trivialize the history and memory of the Shoah. The most pernicious form was Holocaust denial, a form of anti-Semitism. While the deniers remain mostly on the fringes of society, however, we have found ourselves increasingly engaged in a battle against a more subtle form of trivialization borne of ignorance, forgetfulness and carelessness about truth and memory.

For more than a decade, inappropriate and offensive comparisons to the Holocaust have cropped up increasingly in the United States. If you have a falling out with someone, call them a Nazi. If you do not like someone’s political positions, accuse them of being like Hitler. Political leaders have accused each other of using propaganda like Nazi propaganda master Josef Goebbels, or of “sending in the brownshirts,” meaning uniformed Nazis. Celebrities compare their personal ordeals to those of Anne Frank, or in a traumatic moment in their lives, make trite comparisons to Hitler or the Shoah.

As Jews, we have found ourselves needing to constantly raise our voices against this kind of trivialization in an effort not only to remind others of the pain and offensiveness of these remarks, but also to protect the memory of the Shoah, so that we do not wake up one day to a world that no longer remembers the lessons of that period — or, worse, is indifferent to them.

At a time when the trivialization of the Shoah is booming around the world, it is now apparent that we also must do a better job of reminding ourselves and our children of the importance of remembrance, and of protecting the memory of those who perished and the honor of those who fought to defeat the murderous Nazis.

Israelis should no longer refer to other Israelis as “Nazis.” Jewish settlers in the west bank should know better than to shout “Nazi” against Israeli soldiers (who are there, after all, primarily for the settlers’ protection). The fact that some Israelis refer to the 1967 border between Israel and the west bank as “the Auschwitz border” shows how far removed some Israelis and Jews have become from the true horrors of the Shoah.

Those who abuse the memory of the Shoah, particularly those in Israel, must understand that words have consequences. This was one of the primary lessons of the Shoah — that hateful, bigoted words can lead to violent acts.

Now that 70 years have passed, the danger is that an overuse of words — and inapt comparisons — will contribute to a lessening of the true impact and meaning of the Shoah and, likewise, the memory of one of the significant reasons why the Jewish people must be ever vigilant in protecting the interests of the Jewish state.

JTA Wire Service

Abraham H. Foxman
Bergen County resident Abraham H. Foxman is the national director of the Anti-Defamation League and a Holocaust survivor.
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Learning the lessons of history

We are all too familiar with the rhetorical currency of anti-Semites. Jews control the human and material resources of every society in which they are found, the anti-Semites say, no matter how few in number we may be in said society. They maintain an international conspiracy. They meet secretly, presenting a pleasant and cooperative face to the world, but using hidden teachings of their sacred books to plot the overthrow of societies they consider hostile. They say one thing publicly and the opposite in private. They have learned how to “pass” in society, but even the most “assimilated” Jew may be an operative in disguise. They are quick to cry bigotry, but ignore the teachings of contempt within their own synagogues, schools, and sacred books. They never criticize each other. And, of course, they wish to frustrate the public expression of faith by non-Jews.

 

 

The correct use of Title VI

 

Benzion Netanyahu: An appreciation

Benzion Netanyahu — historian, one-time political activist and father of Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister — died Monday in Jerusalem at 102. An accomplished scholar and the patriarch of one of Israel’s most important political families, he also played a surprising and little-known role in United States political history.

Netanyahu was born in Poland in 1910 to a family deeply immersed in the world of religious Zionism. His father, Rabbi Nathan Mileikowsky, a popular Zionist preacher, brought the family to British-ruled Palestine in 1920. He Hebraicized the family name to Netanyahu.

 

 

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“How remarkable!” I will say with (feigned) enthusiasm. To her, however, it is remarkable; she had never noticed it before.

 

 

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Let us start with the new film. Without giving away anything, let us just say it goes there. And, of course, Captain America was launched in 1941 with the iconic image of him punching Hitler in the face, knocking him for a loop. That is no surprise — Cap (like Superman, Batman, X-Men and so many other superheroes) was created by two Jews: Joe Simon (born Hymie Simon) and Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg).

 

 

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“This school looks like a prison,” one of my fellow travelers whispers.

Many of the children are huddled in coats; schools in this neighborhood do not have heat, and the unexpected rain and cool air chill the room.

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