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  • Our Holocaust, But Not Ours Only

    OUR HOLOCAUST, BUT NOT OURS ONLY

    Huffington Post
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/avraham-burg/ou r-holocaust-but-not-our_b_528796.html
    April 7 2010

    This coming Sunday evening in Israel and around the Jewish world,
    is the Holocaust Remembrance Day (in Hebrew, 'Yom Ha'Shoah'). It
    is a well-known, accepted and respected reality amongst the Jewish
    people that the horrors of World War II and the atrocities against
    the Jewish people are a national tragedy. Few, however, are aware that
    this national tragedy became a de facto national strategy, as well.

    A few years ago I addressed this concept in my book titled, The
    Holocaust is Over; We Must Rise From its Ashes (Palgrave Macmillan
    2008). In the book I argued that we must always remember the victims,
    their hopes, prayers and legacies, but we should never allow ourselves
    to live, or get permanently stuck, in that traumatic past. I fully
    believe that we have to think about our today and tomorrow differently
    than this terrible past. Therefore, I offered a new national strategy
    in which we, as a people, can and must move from trauma to trust. Many
    were incapable of listening to me and to such ideas and rejected it
    outright, while others embraced it with enthusiasm. Of those who
    accepted my proposal were my teachers and mentors; my children. I
    would like to share with you several passages from the book that were
    inspired by their wisdom. I hope to convey through these excerpts the
    origin of my proposed strategy and the importance of implementing it
    today for ourselves and for our future generations:

    "I look at the photos that my children send me from their travels
    around the world. I try to perceive the faraway landscapes from their
    vantage point and to share their experience through the images. They
    travel not only to distance themselves from the impure experiences
    of an army, war, occupation, corruption and cynicism, but also in
    search of other landscapes, spiritual ones. The new spirituality that
    is revealed to them is contained in their letters home. We miss you,
    Dad, we long and yearn to be with you, but we find here what we don't
    have at home. We love and want to love even more. We, the generation
    of the new age, are open to and enriched by meetings and encounters
    with whatever is different from us. We are not threatened and do not
    keep to ourselves; on the contrary. My children, our children, seek
    an encounter with worlds that have not been tainted with the bloody
    Shoah. They search for a spirituality that is based on dialogue, not
    trauma. They seek the calm of Buddhist countries and want to bring it
    back home with them to put us all on a softer course of life that is
    accepting and containing, not hostile, suspicious, sharp-edged and
    rejects all. They are children who touch the spiritual even though
    they are not religious..."

    "The new paradigms that originated from the Shoah must be sensitive
    and directed toward the creation of a better human and better humanity,
    toward people and cultures that will never again produce slaughterers
    like the Nazis and will not allow victimization. One law will be
    in the land for the persecuted of the entire world, whatever group:
    Armenian, Gypsy, Jew, homosexual, migrant, or a refugee from Rwanda,
    Cambodia, or Palestine. The new theology, especially the Jewish one,
    must break out of the boundaries of the old faith and make the faith in
    the human, God's creation, a tenet of its legacy and traditions, as a
    mandatory basis for a dialogue between the believers of all faiths..."

    'Two people emerged from Auschwitz,' wrote Professor Yehuda Elkana,
    a wise man, a Shoah survivor, and an early mentor to me, 'a minority
    that claims 'this will never happen again,' and a frightened majority
    that claims: 'this will never happen to us again.'"

    During this sad and moving weekend, when I will think about my dear
    ones, the innocents who were perished at the hands of the Nazis, I
    will be comforted by the wisdom of my children and my teachers. And
    again, as in previous years, I will renew my vow: Never Again! Not
    just for us -- the Jews -- only, but for all of humanity. "For this
    is the whole duty of man" (Ecclesiastes, Ch. 12 v.13).
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