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International Holocaust Remembrance Day: Prejudice And Pride

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  • International Holocaust Remembrance Day: Prejudice And Pride

    INTERNATIONAL HOLOCAUST REMEMBRANCE DAY: PREJUDICE AND PRIDE
    Tiberman Sajiwan Ramyead

    Mauritius Times
    http://www.mauritiustimes.com/250108ramyead. htm
    Jan 25 2008
    Mauritius

    Like many students I read The Diary of Anne Frank during the 1950s,
    at an age when the eyes moistened easily. Then during the early
    1960s I read my first non-fiction book on the horrors of the Second
    World War. I had taken it on loan from the Municipal Library of Quatre
    Bornes. There were several such books in that library, all hard covers
    illustrated with black and white photographs. Over the next two or
    three years I read most of them. To this day I can still see those
    photographs: lampshades the Germans had made with human skin, cakes
    of soap from human fat, the Buchenwald and Auschwitz concentration
    camps, Nazi soldiers with swastika armbands and indifferent faces,
    emaciated Jews, piles of dead bodies, the gas chambers and the
    crematoria. Jugement a Nuremberg, a black and white film on the trial
    of the surviving Nazis, based on the actual trial held just after the
    war, was shown in the cinema halls during those years. It was one of
    the most poignant films on the Holocaust but I think it missed the
    attention of many Mauritians at that time. It would be appropriate
    for the MBC-TV to broadcast this film on next Sunday 27th.

    >From those early impressions my interest in the Holocaust has remained,
    and as a Mauritian my sentiment for the German people has been a
    mixture of resentment, acceptance and reconciliation.

    In 1979 I was on a study tour in China, around three decades after the
    Holocaust. One member of the delegation was a tall and well-built young
    German. In my imagination I placed his face with those Nazis in the
    concentration camps, and it fitted well. He was after all a German,
    and the cruel superiority prejudice of his nation, then split into
    the Federal and Democratic Republics, could not have been transformed
    over one generation. But he was friendly and easy to get on with;
    a reminder of the change that time inscrutably brings among people,
    although this was not my contemplation then.

    The rapport among nations have changed indeed - my cousin and her
    spouse, both Mauritians, are settled in Germany, and till recently
    my son occupied a senior position in a London based bank of German
    origin. In today's unified Germany there are around 45,000 Indian
    citizens and 20,000 persons of Indian origin; and during the Second
    World War, the 950th regiment of the German army was made up of Indian
    soldiers. It was an idea of Subash Chandra Bose and Adolf Hitler!

    Is Nazism effaced from the surface of the globe? Football amateurs will
    recall the open demonstration of neo-Nazis during a match, in France
    I think, three or four years ago. Sporadic signs of Nazi revival have
    been apparent here and there in Germany. Time magazine of 20 January
    2008 reports the aspiration of one young, present-day German: I see
    myself again, running along beside our tanks, waving my men onward,
    marching, fighting, advancing - eastward or westward, I don't care,
    but fighting in a war which will make Germany great again.

    A few years ago, genealogy and the search for graves of earlier Indian
    immigrants took me to the Saint Martin cemetery, and there I stared
    in disbelief at 127 graves of Jews. A Jewish section in a cemetery in
    Mauritius! One's feelings during such moments are difficult to convey
    to those who have not experienced them. They passed away in the Beau
    Bassin prison, then the Barkly Asylum, between 1941 and 1945. Geneviève
    Pitot has written a book on the touching story of those 1600 Jewish
    detainees who arrived in the island in 1940 (Reference). Another
    Mauritian, Jacques Desmarais, maintained that section of the cemetery
    at his own expense until his death, out of a sense of duty and homage.

    1889 - Enter Adolph Hitler

    It was the year when God bequeathed to the earth one of his
    unexplainable creations. A baby boy, Adolph Hitler was born in
    the then Austria-Hungary. Nineteen years later, the Art Academy in
    Vienna unwittingly contributed to the making of a leader, the future
    architect and engineer of modern history's most massive genocide. It
    turned down the admission of Hitler who wanted to be an artist. The
    frustrated young man wandered about aimlessly for some time, and then
    joined the army. Like most Austrians, he despised the Jews. Then there
    followed a series of events which culminated in the extermination of
    six million Jews. Had the Academy admitted young Adolph, humankind's
    modern history would certainly have been different. The story of the
    Second World War and Hitler's inglorious schemes to exterminate this
    race are well known.

    What is the Holocaust?

    Websites abound with information on the Holocaust. Although not
    commonly used, 'Holocaust' is an important word in modern human
    history. Dictionaries generally provide convergent meanings of
    the word, although with a few interesting nuances. In general terms
    holocaust means destruction or slaughter on a massive scale, and 'the
    Holocaust' (capital letter) denotes the mass murder of Jews under
    the German Nazi regime in the Second World War (1939-1945). Around
    nine million Jews lived in German-occupied Europe and by 1945 two out
    every three European Jews had been killed. The 1960 edition of Petit
    Larousse, for instance, provides a historical insight of the word:
    Sacrifice en usage chez les juifs, et dans lequel la victime etait
    entièrement consumee par le feu. This dictionary does not refer to
    the mass slaughter of the Jews and mentions the fact in its 1990
    edition. Not all dictionaries indicate the scale of the slaughter --
    around six million. The exact number will never be known; in certain
    extermination camps one gas chamber could contain over a thousand.

    In Jewish use the Holocaust equivalent is 'Shoah'. Genocide is
    one synonym of holocaust, but 'the Holocaust' is specific to the
    extermination of the Jews.

    Sunday 27 January - International Holocaust Remembrance Day

    It is astonishing that this Remembrance Day, in memory of THE most
    barbaric genocide in mankind's modern history, was designated by the
    United Nations General Assembly only two years ago. 27 January 1945
    was the liberation date of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death
    camp. It was the shock and awe brought about by the Holocaust that gave
    birth to the United Nations Charter, replacing the League of Nations;
    representatives of 50 countries agreed to keep peace, encourage
    co-operation between nations and defend human rights. There does not
    seem to be clear primary information sources explaining the reasons
    that took the parliament of the world -- the UN general Assembly -
    60 years after its coming into being, to designate the International
    Holocaust Remembrance Day. The more so being given that it was the
    Holocaust itself that triggered the setting up of the UN.

    At its sixtieth session, on 21 November 2005, the General Assembly took
    note of "the fact that the sixtieth session of the General Assembly
    is taking place during the sixtieth year of the defeat of the Nazi
    regime." It honoured "the courage and dedication shown by the soldiers
    who liberated the concentration camps," reaffirmed that the Holocaust
    "will forever be a warning to all people of the dangers of hatred,
    bigotry, racism and prejudice," and resolved that the 27 January
    would be an "annual International Day of Commemoration in memory of
    the victims of the Holocaust."

    The General Assembly urged Member States "to develop educational
    programmes that will inculcate future generations with the lessons
    of the Holocaust in order to help to prevent future acts of genocide."

    It is hoped that the Mauritian government, as a Member State of the
    UN, will organise some sensitisation programme on the Holocaust;
    even on its website, which the young probably peruse more than the
    written press. The lessons learnt from this genocide are not altogether
    disconnected from our multi-ethnic realities.

    Reactions to the Holocaust

    Opposing views to the commemoration of the Holocaust serve as yet
    more reminders to the continuing messy relations among nations. Last
    year the Iranian President publicly called the Holocaust "a myth"
    and called for the State of Israel to be "wiped off the map". The UN
    resolution rejects denial of the Holocaust.

    Francois Gautier, born in Paris in 1950, arrived in India when he
    was 19. He was a writer, journalist and correspondent for well-known
    publications in France, but he fell in love with India and became a
    staunch supporter of Hindu nationalist movements. His observation,
    wrongly or rightly, contribute to some food for thought on other past
    massacres: "The massacres perpetrated by the Muslims in India are
    unparalleled in history, bigger than the Holocaust of the Jews by the
    Nazis; or the massacre of the Armenians by the Turks; more extensive
    even than the slaughter of the South American Native populations by
    the invading Spanish and Portuguese."

    But that does not mean that the Holocaust Remembrance Day should not
    be observed with all the dignity it deserves, by all nations.

    [email protected]

    Notes and References

    - Websites on the Holocaust

    - The photograph shows a group of Jewish children just before execution

    - 'The Mauritian Shekel - The story of the Jewish Detainees in
    Mauritius, 1940-1945.'Geneviève Pitot. 1998

    - 'The Encyclopedia of the Indian Diaspora'. General Editor Brij V.

    Lal. Editions Didier Millet, Singapore. 2006. Page 358

    - 'The Modern World since 1870'. L.E. Snellgrove. Longman Group Ltd,
    London 1977

    - Adherence to the UN started in 1945. Mauritius joined in April 1968
    and Germany in September 1973. The last to become a Member State has
    been Montenegro in June 2006. There are 192 member states

    --Boundary_(ID_5amfAoIm+PNDyERkTsUoYg)--
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