Holocaust Rememberance Day
Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 9:33 pm
April 15th is more than the American personal income tax deadline this year; it's also Holocaust Rememberance Day. (Note that, being Sunday, the tax day is moved to tomorrow.) Today we remember and acknowledge one of the greatest terrors humanity has ever faced--the end result of hate, fanaticism, pseudoscience, and the tendancy to allow others to decide for us our morals and our fate. It is now over sixty years ago, and yet it's still a gaping wound in our species, that twelve million people were killed in an effort to eradicate whole races and nationalities, including most notably the Jews.
Today, Israel has the acceptance of most of the civilized world as a nation. But, there are those who continue to deny their right to exist. They claim that the Israelis are invading territory that once belonged to the Palestinians. This claim is dubious at best, as the people who form the Palestinian territories--the West Bank and Gaza Strip--were migrant, feuding tribes at the time of Israel's founding. None-the-less, the Palestinians have considerable support throughout the Middle East, including the endorsement of the governments of Iran, Syria, and Lebanon. These endorsements have come with violence and repeated acts of terrorism, coupled with repeated failures to abide by Israel's peace offerings. (I do acknowledge that Israel fought back in the last year--perhaps out of desperation, but they, too, none-the-less attacked innocents.) While the present day situation and ongoing conflicts are subject to debate, Iran and its associates have made an insult to humanity and civilization in claiming that the holocaust did not happen.
Is it really a plausible conspiracy--that an entire race of people conspired to confabulate rumors of the deaths of millions of people, and that the majority of the civilized world played along, actively constructing names, evidence, footage, bodies, relics, and an entire history? Or, is it that the truth that something so terrible is just hard to believe, however real the evidence is? I must accept the latter, because the facts are there. I met one of the survivors; she was old but retained substantial vitality. Rather, it is a perpetuation of hate and toxic, infectious ideologies towards which Iran endevours. While I do not advocate war with them, I would advocate that their own people evaluate their government and read history, lest it repeat itself.
It must never happen again.
When a government identifies a race or people and singles them out, take heed. When a ruling party declares one race inherantly superior or inferior to another, that government has started a process that leads to nightmares. When the rights of conscious, living beings are sorted and divided, the downward spiral leads us dangeriously closer to the railroad that ends in Auchwitz. When a person follows orders that are evil, forcing the next person to do the same, then the waves build into a tsunami potentially as devistating as the one that sixteen months ago devistated whole countries in the Indo-Pacific.
Don't let it happen again.
Today, Israel has the acceptance of most of the civilized world as a nation. But, there are those who continue to deny their right to exist. They claim that the Israelis are invading territory that once belonged to the Palestinians. This claim is dubious at best, as the people who form the Palestinian territories--the West Bank and Gaza Strip--were migrant, feuding tribes at the time of Israel's founding. None-the-less, the Palestinians have considerable support throughout the Middle East, including the endorsement of the governments of Iran, Syria, and Lebanon. These endorsements have come with violence and repeated acts of terrorism, coupled with repeated failures to abide by Israel's peace offerings. (I do acknowledge that Israel fought back in the last year--perhaps out of desperation, but they, too, none-the-less attacked innocents.) While the present day situation and ongoing conflicts are subject to debate, Iran and its associates have made an insult to humanity and civilization in claiming that the holocaust did not happen.
Is it really a plausible conspiracy--that an entire race of people conspired to confabulate rumors of the deaths of millions of people, and that the majority of the civilized world played along, actively constructing names, evidence, footage, bodies, relics, and an entire history? Or, is it that the truth that something so terrible is just hard to believe, however real the evidence is? I must accept the latter, because the facts are there. I met one of the survivors; she was old but retained substantial vitality. Rather, it is a perpetuation of hate and toxic, infectious ideologies towards which Iran endevours. While I do not advocate war with them, I would advocate that their own people evaluate their government and read history, lest it repeat itself.
It must never happen again.
When a government identifies a race or people and singles them out, take heed. When a ruling party declares one race inherantly superior or inferior to another, that government has started a process that leads to nightmares. When the rights of conscious, living beings are sorted and divided, the downward spiral leads us dangeriously closer to the railroad that ends in Auchwitz. When a person follows orders that are evil, forcing the next person to do the same, then the waves build into a tsunami potentially as devistating as the one that sixteen months ago devistated whole countries in the Indo-Pacific.
Don't let it happen again.