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POLITICAL FIDDLING ON THE ROOFTOPS OF HATRED |
January 25th, the White House released their statement honoring
Auschwitz's liberation 60th anniversary. The President proclaimed
Auschwitz a reminder "when we find anti-Semitism, we must come together to
fight it."
One day earlier, January 24th, the United Nations General Assembly
convened in a 28th special session to mark the liberation from death
camps, Israel's initiative for the first ever special session dealing with
issues relating to their Middle East democracy. Saudi Arabia, financier of
terrorist attacks on Israeli and American citizens had supported Israel's
UN initiative. The world witnessed who refused one minute of their time,
sixty seconds of silence, ten for each million murdered. Arab countries
exited en masse during the tribute to Auschwitz's dead. All except Jordan,
Transjordan, established as Palestine during the British Mandate of 1948.
Kofi Anan remained silent as did representatives for the rest of the
world, resonating six decades ago as 6 million burned alive, victims of
their birth, culture, deformity, genetics, religious persuasion and sexual
predilection. Six months earlier, UN Secretary General, Kofi Anan, spoke
up denouncing Israel's security fence.
The Special Session asking the international community to remember those
who fought and defeated the Nazis was made two days before Israeli Prime
Minister Sharon ordered disbanding the Israel Defense Force all-religious
troops objectors to his disengagement plan for the West Bank. Israel,
proud of the fact it succeeded in convening this event called this one
moment historic.
Holocaust Week's Memorial events included a State Ceremony in Poland. US
Vice President Cheney wore a green parka. Rimmed in white fur, the Vice
President stood out in the sea of black on a day intended to strengthen
international awareness of the Holocaust continuing the fight against all
religious intolerance. An adult version of the little girl in red on the
poster for Steven Spielberg's movie "Schindler's List," Cheney, criticized
for his fashion faux, gave the world something to remember on the day too
many would rather forget, the day marking the turning point for Israel's
birth, a Middle East haven for Jews and Arabs choosing to live together
free from hate. The world will always remember America's Vice President in
green. And white fur.
President Bush said, "May God bless their memory and their families, and
may we always remember." Until we forget. The following week there were 29
UN condemnations of Israel.
Rebbetzin Esther Yungreis, founder of Hineni, "I am here, God," founded in
memory of her murdered in concentration camps, told her weekly Upper West
Side Torah study group, a reporter asked her to comment on the 60th
memorial for the murdered. A unique voice unwilling to chorus on "never
should have happened, must never happen again," Jungreis refused comment
on the Holocaust dead instead commented on anti-semitism still destroying
Jewish living.
Two weeks preceding Russia's President Putin's plan to participate in
Poland's State Ceremony attended by world leaders honoring the Russian
liberators of the Nazi death camps of sixty years ago, Auschwitz-Berkenau,
twenty members of Russia's lower house of Parliament demanded Prosecutor
General Vladimir Ustinov demanded "prohibition in our country of all
religious and ethnic Jewish organizations as extremist," outlawing all
Jewish organizations, punishing officials who support them.
Disseminating hatred within seconds, lawmaker Alexander Krutoc faxed news
service Associated Press a press release stating Russian lawmakers from
the nationalist Rodina, Liberal Democratic as well as the Communist
Parties were accusing Jews of "fomenting ethnic hatred" saying "they
provoke anti-Semitism." Russia's chief Rabbi Berel Lazar argued Putin's
government is "failing to prosecute perpetrators of anti-Semitic and
racial violence." Russia's Holocaust Foundation head Alla Gerber said the
situation is horrible "ripe for the re-emergence of anti-semitism." Gerber
said the enemy needed "is well-known, traditional." Russia's Holocaust
expert said, "We can speak again of the danger of fascism in the countries
that defeated fascism."
The words of Eva, one of the few remaining survivors, resonate loudest.
She recalls when she was liberated from the Camp, fourteen, she walk
through a park enroute to family she hoped was alive. Eva's irony noted,
"life was actually continuing normal while she was away in the camp."
I looked out my hotel window, up Pico, towards Los Angeles Museum of
Tolerance. Words from the musical inspired by Sholom Aleichem's 1905 short
story "Tevye and His Daughters" interrupted my thoughts. A day earlier,
passing through New York, I noted the musical that defied rules of
Broadway song and dance success, dealing with issues of persecution and
struggle to keep religious beliefs a midst a hostile environment, was
experiencing yet another revival. "Fiddler On The Roof," for a while, the
longest running production in the history of Broadway was back, along with
the highest reported rise in anti-Semitism globally.
I hummed Tevye the Milkman's Sabbath Prayer, "May the Lord Protect and
defend me. May He always shield me from pain.."
BIO: Carrie Devorah is an award winning investigative photojournalist
based in Washington DC. Her family are the first Canadians to lose a
member to a terrorist bus bombing in Jerusalem. Devorah is a certified
crime information analyst and profiler. www.goldbergmemorial.org
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