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  • Horrors of the Holocaust bring Jews closer to their faith

    Providence Journal, RI
    Dec 31 2006

    Horrors of the Holocaust bring Jews closer to their faith

    01:00 AM EST on Sunday, December 31, 2006


    He told me that the columns I'd written about Auschwitz and Dachau
    had moved him deeply. `What happened in those places was a horror
    show,' he said. Then he added this:

    `But the whole idea of gas chambers, a lot of that was just myth.'

    He went on: `Many of the claims surrounding the camps are just
    atrocity propaganda.'

    I don't often write a series of three columns on the same subject,
    but in this case, I was drawn to explore it one more time.

    Two weeks ago, the Holocaust deniers' conference in Iran prompted me
    to revisit the words of camp survivors I'd interviewed over the
    years. After that article appeared, I heard from an aging Catholic GI
    who had helped liberate Dachau, so last week, I told his story.

    Those columns brought several phone messages from people questioning
    the Holocaust. One such caller went on for almost 10 minutes.

    I'll tell you what left me most surprised about him. You expect such
    people to be angry and less educated. But he was respectful, measured
    and articulate. He signed off by saying, `I've always liked your
    column, and I thank you for your time. I hope you have happy holidays
    and God bless.'

    He did not leave a name, but I'd like to have a conversation with him
    today. Let me begin with some of what he told me.

    `In Europe,' he said, `you can insult Muslims, insult Christians, but
    if you question one iota of the Holocaust, you're subject to censure,
    fines and imprisonment. You're a heretic questioning holy writ, and
    that's a thought-stopping smear.'

    He went on: `I can't imagine the horror that went on in those places.
    But the living in Germany today should not be unfairly demonized for
    things that may or may not have happened.'

    He talked about the deaths.

    `Did millions of Jews die in the camps? Most certainly, and in a
    gruesome fashion.' But he said it wasn't intentional - these were
    meant to be work camps. Many, if not most, of the deaths, he said,
    were from starvation after allies bombed rail-lines. `The food just
    ran out when trains couldn't get to the camps anymore.'

    Typhus, he added, caused many camp deaths, and he said that the real
    function of any gas chambers were not to kill prisoners, but to kill
    the typhus. The infamous Zyklon-B gas used at places like Auschwitz,
    he said, was a known pesticide.

    Finally, he said he didn't care much about Middle East politics, but
    claimed that Holocaust `exaggerations' have long been used to keep
    anyone from questioning Israel in any way.

    `What happened wasn't right,' he concluded. `It just wasn't as
    malevolent as people claim it was.'

    How to respond?

    Let me start by saying he got me thinking about laws in Germany and
    other countries that make Holocaust denial a crime. On the one hand,
    such speech can incite anti-Semitic extremists, in the same way that
    radical Muslim clerics can incite terrorism. But I can see how
    imprisoning Holocaust questioners could backfire by punishing
    controversial ideas.

    As for the rest of what he said, well, for starters, Zyklon-B was
    indeed a pesticide, but even Nazi officials have testified its
    cyanide component made it effective for mass killing in gas chambers.
    And there are libraries of evidence showing that Hitler planned and
    implemented a `final solution' of the `Jewish problem.' Frankly,
    `proving' the Holocaust is as easy as talking to survivors with
    tattooed numbers on their arms.

    So with the little space I have left, I'd like to address a question
    that I think is more central.

    Why do people bother to question the Holocaust? In the Arab world and
    elsewhere, it seems to be a suspicion that Jews obsess on the death
    camps to gain sympathy for Israel.

    I don't think that's true. Partly, it's the same reason people
    `obsess' about, oh, events ranging from the Civil War to 9/11 - these
    are important parts of history with cautionary lessons for today.

    But there's an even deeper reason Jews focus on the Holocaust that
    few understand.

    Although it happened less than 70 years ago, many Jews have begun to
    see it as their faith's version of the Crucifixion. A thousand years
    from now, if Jews survive, it will likely remain that sacred.

    Why focus on something so sad as a centerpiece of identity?

    You could ask the same question of Christians: Why focus on Christ's
    terrible death? Much of it, of course, is the theology that He died
    for people's sins. But I've come to realize that every people finds
    it important, even shaping, to remember and honor the deepest
    suffering of their kind.

    I once wrote an almost too-graphic column about the horrible things
    done to Armenians when more than a million were killed in a genocide
    by Turks from 1915 to 1917. I wondered if Armenian readers would
    chide me for being so grisly in print. Instead, I heard from scores
    who thanked me for remembering. Curiously, they were grateful that I
    mentioned the most horrible details.

    Why? Because such ancestral suffering is central to them.

    As the Crucifixion is for Christians.

    And the Holocaust for Jews.

    It's not political. It's a matter of the soul.

    And so, to my caller, I thank you for your time, and hope this
    holiday season will bring you peace.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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