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Sam Sokol

BySam Sokol, Sam Sokol

Opinion

If you want to stop exploitation of the Holocaust abroad, stamp it out at home

US Jews are not indifferent to assimilation, but Rafi Peretz's divisive rhetoric is unequivocally wrong, says Sam Sokol

July 10, 2019 08:41
Rafi Peretz, leader of the Jewish Home party
2 min read

Last year, Israel and Poland entered into a high profile diplomatic spat over the issue of Holocaust memory.

The Polish government, like many of their counterparts across eastern and central Europe, had intentionally weaponised history, distorting the memory of their own role in the genocide in a way completely unacceptable to the Jews.

During that spat, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu baldly asserted that the Jewish state had “no tolerance for distorting the truth, historical revisionism, or Holocaust denial.... We will not accept any attempt whatsoever to rewrite history. We will accept no restriction on research into historical truth.”

That was all well and good but — leaving aside Israel’s record of declining to grapple with this issue in the cases of the Hungary, Lithuania and Ukraine — the Israelis themselves should have paid closer attention to the premier’s message.