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'Sikh' means 'to learn', and that's what I did on the March of the Living

Jasvir Singh explains what went through his mind as he took part in the memorial walk to Auschwitz

May 9, 2019 13:00
The interfaith group at the gates of Auschwitz
1 min read

What does it mean to suffer and survive when virtually everyone around you has been killed? Would it weaken your faith or strengthen it? Would you risk your own life to save others? Those were just some of the questions I found myself asking during Yom Hashoah when I was part of the very first interfaith delegation with March of the Living UK.

As probably the only Sikh on the entire March, I was privileged to be on the ‘Holy Bus’ accompanied by learned rabbis and priests, as well as other leading figures from the British Jewish, Christian, Muslim and Hindu communities.

The word ‘Sikh’ literally means ‘to learn’, and that is precisely what I did during the trip. Learn about the rich Jewish history and heritage in Poland for the last 1,000 years, learn about the ghettos in Warsaw and Krakow, learn about the families who lost loved ones in the most awful and tragic of circumstances, and learn from those of other faiths about how they would process the events of 1940s Europe.

The number of people ruthlessly killed during the Holocaust is unfathomable, and the only way to understand it is through contextualising the numbers. Imagine three out of every four people currently living in London being killed in the space of just four years. Six million people murdered in cold blood. Think of how many of your friends that would be, your colleagues, your loved ones. People you would never see again. That was the number of Jews exterminated by the Nazis in the Shoah.