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Jonathan Freedland

ByJonathan Freedland, Jonathan Freedland

Opinion

Saying ‘Never again’ about the Holocaust means nothing

Let’s never again say “never again.” It means nothing, argues Jonathan Freedland

December 16, 2016 12:10
3 min read

Here are two weary words that we ought to retire: never again. Let's agree not to use them next month, when we gather for the annual Holocaust Memorial Day ceremonies. Let's agree that they have lost all meaning. 

Of course the sentiment behind them is noble. After the Holocaust, we vowed that never again would the world allow such horror. The Shoah would stand as a kind of terrible terminus of history — an end- point that showed how low humanity could sink and to which we would never return.

But look at what’s happened since. The roll-call is familiar (and, despite what some say, it is recalled every Holocaust Memorial Day): Cambodia, Rwanda, Srebrenica, with perhaps the chemical slaughter at Hama and Halabja added for good measure. And now we must induct another name into that hall of infamy: Aleppo.

There, civilians who had spent many months hiding in basements, shielding themselves from an unending rainstorm of bombs or shells, who had seen every last hospital deliberately targeted for destruction, who had seen even their makeshift underground clinics destroyed from the air, signalled to the world that they were preparing for death. Their tormentors — the Assad government, with the Russian and Iranian militaries at their side — were about to recapture the last rebel-held corner of Aleppo and they knew they would not survive. They used social media to record farewell messages. Even the children said goodbye.