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Address by Ruth Bondi
in the name of the survivors
I would like to talk about names – not
on behalf of the survivors, as they can speak for themselves – but
on behalf of the dead, even though I was not authorized by them to
do so. Firstly, about the name of the day on the eve of which we
are gathered here: Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day, a
title chosen in the early years of the State of Israel. This name
implies that the Holocaust of six million people, and the heroism of
those who took up arms, the rebels and partisans, are two separate
entities, which they are not. The heroism is at the heart of the
Holocaust, an inseparable part of it. The heroism of the mothers
who stayed with their children instead of saving themselves, of the
sons and daughters who refused to abandon their parents, of the
doctors and nurses who took care of the sick despite the terrible
risk to their own lives, the heroism of every single person who
tried to alleviate the suffering of another, of every person who
struggled to stay alive till the bitter end. I hope that the day
will come when we Israelis will be sufficiently mature to give this
remembrance day its rightful name: Holocaust Day.
Furthermore, primarily in the name of
the dead but also in the name of those survivors still living, I
protest the use of Holocaust jargon in the context of political
rivalry, here today, between Jews: Judenrein, Judenrat, Nazis and
Judeo-Nazis, Auschwitz, the images of swastikas and SS uniforms,
used by Jews for political purposes: this is the real desecration of
the Holocaust. Neither the performing of Wagner nor the gratuitous
use of the term “Holocaust” is as painful, embarrassing and
provocative as the use of Holocaust terminology in the political
life of a Jewish state. Holocaust denial and distortion in Europe
and America are upsetting and worrying, and must be fought, but the
use of vocabulary from the most horrific period in Jewish history by
Jews against other Jews, that is intolerable and unforgivable.
After all, the Hebrew dictionary is not short of degrading words and
curses unconnected to the Holocaust.
When this Holocaust Remembrance
Authority was given the name Yad Vashem, there were no computers,
and no one could have imagined the registration of millions of names
of Holocaust victims. Indeed, to my mind, this is the greatest
commemorative project of all – to preserve the name and the memory
of each individual who perished in the Holocaust. The figure of
6,000,000 is like a thick fog in which nothing is perceptible. The
3,200,000 names of Holocaust victims recorded on computer at Yad
Vashem, and the hundreds of thousands which are still to be added –
these are the only memorial to those who have no known grave, the
only monument to those turned to dust and ashes. Soon, no one will
be left to retain the memory of the individuals, the parents, the
siblings and the friends, no one who still sees their faces, hears
their voices, feels their presence. The campaign to commemorate
their names ensures the preservation of the memory of each
individual with his or her name, date and place of birth, time and
place of death (sometimes only approximate), when the survivors will
have passed on.
I will just add this on behalf of the survivors: in
these difficult times, when parents see their children killed, when
we see the smiling young faces of the victims of terror in the press
and on television, our thoughts keep returning to those terrible
days sixty years ago, and we draw strength from them. After World
War II we came to Eretz Israel – many of us as fighters in the War
of Independence – not because we thought we could live here safely,
but in order to live among Jews in a Jewish state, and never again
to be a minority, barely tolerated. This remains the paramount
consideration, even today: to live in a Jewish state. Perhaps we
will never live in peace and security in our own land, but even so,
we must continue as far as possible with our everyday lives, our
work, our routine, as these also provide us with much-needed
support. Today the pictures, children’s drawings, songs and musical
compositions created in the Holocaust period are the subject of
renewed interest. Beyond their artistic value, however, is their
inherent message for our own times: work, create, love, raise
children, take joy in the small things, hope, don’t give up, see
beauty in the commonplace, even in the harsh reality we are
experiencing. Perhaps that is the only lesson to be learned from us
survivors: that every day is a gift, and that the greatest prize is
not winning the lottery, but life itself. |