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Address of President
Moshe Katsav
Opening Ceremony of
Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day 2004
1944 was a decisive year in
World War II. Defeat after defeat was inflicted on the
German forces, but despite the fact that Allied victory
was clearly in the offing, Nazi Germany was determined to
complete the “Final Solution”, the murder of European
Jewry. To this end, the Nazis redoubled their efforts to
reach every last Jew before the war ended, annihilating
community after community, individual after individual, in
their homes, ghettos and hiding places. This was also the
fate of most of Hungarian Jewry, the last large Jewish
community in Europe. In just fifty-six days, the Nazi and
Hungarian regimes deported 437,000 Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau,
where most of them were murdered on the day of their
arrival. As their empire crumbled, the Nazis drew on
sorely-needed resources from the war effort to liquidate
the Lodz ghetto, to slaughter the last Jews in Kovno and
Shavli, Lithuania, and to annihilate the Jewish
communities of Rhodes, Corfu and Kos. Jews in hiding were
hunted and killed; in July, just one month before France
was liberated, 300 children and their caregivers were
seized and sent to their deaths in Auschwitz-Birkenau;
Holland saw the last deportation leave on 3 September
1944, with 1,019 Jews on board. As the Germans retreated,
thousands upon thousands of camp prisoners were marched
hundreds of kilometers on death marches towards Germany
and Austria. Those who survived were forced to work; many
finally gave out and expired.
During 1944, when the
Allies had gained the upper hand, the world knew: the
world saw, but continued to ignore the extermination of
European Jewry. The State of Israel and Yad Vashem, have
a historic duty to redeem the stories and names of the
Holocaust victims. Yad Vashem is committed to salvage the
memory of each of the six million from the oblivion the
Nazis intended. To date, approaching 3,000,000 names have
been recorded, but much remains to be done. It is upon
the Jewish world to join this mission and help restore the
memory of each and every victim.
We will leave no stone
unturned in our efforts to retrieve the memory of the life
of every Jew killed in the Holocaust. The survivors have
played a central role in transmitting the legacy of the
Holocaust. When there are no eyewitnesses left, this
responsibility will fall on the Jewish people, people of
conscience, teachers and educators, historians and
Holocaust research scholars. Teaching the story of the
Holocaust to the younger generations honors the debt we
owe the Holocaust victims, but over and above that, we owe
it to ourselves, in order to consolidate our identity and
to preserve a humane, moral and even political
consciousness in a world where there isn’t always room for
goodness and justice.
The endurance of the
Holocaust victims in extreme situations and their efforts
to preserve their humanity have universal significance.
The Righteous Among the Nations, who jeopardized their
lives to save Jews during this dark period, prove that it
was possible to act differently. The Holocaust was unique
to the Jewish people, but it has universal significance
for humanity as a whole, now and forever more.
Sixty years after the
Holocaust, we are once again witnessing a revival of
antisemitism in Europe. When the war ended, many believed
that the memory of the Holocaust would act as a deterrent,
that mankind would never again let antisemitism rear its
head. In recent years, however, we are again seeing arson
attacks on synagogues, cemeteries desecrated, hate mail,
blood libels and incitement. Once again, Jews are afraid
to wear skullcaps and stars of David outside their homes.
Today, the left and the
right are working together in Europe; antisemitism
promotes demonizing of the Jews and the de-legitimization
of the State of Israel. Antisemitism is diametrically
opposed to human values. It is often intertwined with
terrorism, and constitutes a threat to democracy. The
struggle against antisemitism has to be everyone’s
struggle. In a country where they burn synagogues today,
the day is not far off when state institutions will be
attacked, and the very existence of democracy will be
endangered. We, the Jewish people, will continue to carry
out our historic duty with pain and sorrow: to remember
the Holocaust and impart both its legacy and the
imperative to fight for the basic values of human society
for the generations to come. |