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By

Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis

Opinion

Yom Hashoah's vital message

April 24, 2014 14:17
2 min read

A number of years ago, I led a group on a most memorable trip to Poland. As we were making our way to Auschwitz-Birkenau, following a moving Shacharit service in the restored Oswiecim synagogue, we were appalled to see a Polish bystander make a Nazi salute as we passed by. We shuddered to think that, so close to the site of the concentration camp that is a prime symbol of Nazi evil, rabid antisemitism was still alive.

Contrast that experience with an encounter that a friend of mine had in the Polish city of Katowice. After he concluded a business deal, a Polish accountant present asked to see him privately. The accountant asked him if he were Jewish. When my friend replied that he was, the Pole tucked his hand into his shirt and drew out a Magen David. “I am a Catholic,” he said, “and I will wear this for the rest of my life as a sign of shame for what my people did to yours.”

By now, many of us have returned, as visitors, to concentration camps and to the towns and villages of our parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. There we have seen fields that conceal mass graves, empty crematoria where Jewish bodies burned and towns that nave been regenerated from emptied ghettos. The silence of the present does not disguise the nightmare of the past. The Holocaust was not merely perpetrated by card-carrying Nazis alone — and the same is true of genocides since — they required, at best, popular indifference and, at worst, collaboration.

Despite the devastation, Jewish life in Europe has continued. Reconsecrated synagogues, rejuvenated communities and resplendent testaments, such as the Jüdisches Museum in Berlin, indicate that European Jewry may, once again, be blossoming.