Holocaust survivors are dwindling – we must keep the memory alive - opinion

Published date27 January 2023
To symbolize the significance of the Holocaust for Jews of the entire world, the UN General Assembly has designated January 27 as the date for the international commemoration of Holocaust victims. This date was chosen because it is the day that the Red Army entered Auschwitz, the camp that symbolized – more than any other – the attempt at the total annihilation of the Jewish people

It was an industry of death, which was the result of a hateful ideology and racism. This day gathers us all – Jews living in Israel and those living around the world, under one common umbrella – that of responsibility for the memory of our Jewish heritage.

Perhaps most of all, this day symbolizes what many Holocaust researchers have termed the "globalization of Holocaust remembrance." Over the years, the Holocaust has become – especially in Europe and the Western world – a global memory and an integral part of Jewish identity. In almost every major city in the world today, there are museums for the commemoration of the Holocaust and institutions dedicated to the commemoration of the Holocaust.

In most cases, collective memory represents a shared memory of ethnic, national or religious groups. The Holocaust, however, is an event that is stored in the collective memory of humanity and is also present in countries that were not associated with it.

On the other hand, the danger of Holocaust denial, and antisemitism as a widespread phenomenon, threatens the human pain of the Holocaust and challenges the need to continue to establish the memory of the Holocaust as an exception in the international landscape, in the face of any other sacred memory. As such, it constitutes an ethical mission for Jews and non-Jews alike.

The Holocaust evokes a sense of pain among my generation, a pain that we heard with our own ears from Holocaust survivors, since it was a significant part of our education in values and morals. As time goes on, there are fewer and fewer Holocaust survivors, and the responsibility for preserving the memory rests on the shoulders of us all – governments, the public and individuals.

BECAUSE THE younger generation was raised by the second and third generations since the Holocaust, and they did not experience the survivors as a primary source, one of the most common and urgent questions asked by educators and researchers engaged in Holocaust education is: What will the teaching and...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT