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Karen Pollock

ByKaren Pollock, Karen Pollock

Opinion

This is a chance for us to unite in our survival

April 17, 2015 12:41
3 min read

‘I only wish to be remembered, I wish my wife to be remembered, Gele Seksztajn. I wish my little daughter to be remembered. Margalit is 20 months old today.” These are the words of Israel Lichtensztajn. Israel died during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, which began 72 years ago this week. His writings are part of what we have come to know as the Oneg Shabbat archive; the work of a brave group of people who, having realised they would not survive the war, decided to collect and bury as much as they could to attest to the horrors of the Nazis and bear witness for future generations.

I was reminded of his words recently, when asked by a journalist why we have two days of memorial for the Holocaust – one for the Jewish community (Yom HaShoah) and one observed more widely (Holocaust Memorial Day). It is an important question and one which I think we all have a responsibility to consider.

Yom HaShoah was inaugurated in Israel in 1953, just five years after the establishment of the State of Israel and very much against the backdrop of a new nation still reeling from the loss and displacement of the Holocaust. Since then it has grown into a day commemorated by Jewish communities around the world.

On January 27, 2001, the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, this country held its first ever national Holocaust Memorial Day – a day which has also gone from strength to strength and which I am immensely proud to have been a part of since its inception. It came about as a direct response to the question: there is a Jewish day to remember, but what about everyone else? There was a sense that Holocaust Memorial Day would provide an opportunity for people from all backgrounds, of all ages, to come together and remember.