Become a Member
Opinion

United in love, hope and horror

Sir Bernard Zissman took part in the March of the Living for the first time this year, while in his 80s, and felt 'totally helpless' as he witnessed the mass graves in front of him

April 17, 2018 13:59
The 2018 UK group taking part in the March of the Living
7 min read

This is a personal reflection of a “never to be forgotten” experience of four days in Poland in April 2018. That is when we joined 270 others from the UK to see, hear and remember the horror of the Holocaust.

Our party was a party of 11,000 Jews and non-Jews who marched from Auschwitz to Birkenau to show that, however evil the Nazis were, Jewish life continues through the hopes and enthusiasm of a new generation of Jews determined not to forget, but to remember and continue to build a future.

So what did I feel? Why had I not done this trip before? Why wait until now? I have followed the example of my own grandchildren who have made this pilgrimage. But what were my thoughts as someone who had lived as a child through the Second World War, been rushed into the air raid shelter every night and evacuated from the bombing in my home of Birmingham.

Why did I know so little?

My first thoughts were: why did I know so little in 1945 of the horrors that had struck the Jews of Europe? We had seen news pictures on Pathe News and Movietone in the cinema and images in the newspapers of the liberation of the camps, the unbelievable scenes of skeletal human beings and the discovery of the mass graves. This was a time of little or no television in the home. And then nothing! There were no further pictures, very few, if any reports, no debate, no discussion. Through my teens I cannot recall any obvious reporting of a tragedy which had claimed six million Jewish lives and the lives of millions of others, until until the reporting of the Nuremberg trials.