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  • We must not be indifferent to others suffering

    Jewish Chronicle, UK
    May 3 2014

    We must not be indifferent to others suffering

    By Ronnie Landau, May 3, 2014
    Follow The JC on Twitter

    Several years ago, I received a disturbing telephone call concerning
    my 14 year-old step-daughter. At the time she was spending several
    months in a children's village in northern Israel. The caller, who was
    Israeli-born, informed me that his son was a participant in the same
    scheme. Did I know, he asked, that a bus carrying some of the children
    had been stoned [sic] as it passed a neighbouring Arab village?
    Ishould be aware that there were Arabs working in the kitchens in our
    children's village; that they had knives close to hand (hardly
    surprising, I thought, in a kitchen!); and that they came from the
    same village which had been responsible for the stone-throwing
    incident.

    While expressing gratitude for this information about the bus, I felt
    somewhat contaminated by what I took to be his racist sentiments. Was
    he really suggesting that we should pressure the authorities to
    dismiss the Arabs from their posts?

    Surely, I started to reason with him, the whole infrastructure of
    Israeli society, not to mention the battered peace process, could
    collapse if Arabs were continually stereotyped and shut out from the
    Israeli economy?

    "You don't know the Arab mentality", he kept insisting. He then
    enumerated various random acts of violence by Israeli Arabs towards
    Israeli Jews they had lived peacefully beside for years.

    His bigoted views were not new to me, the emotive parental context of
    our conversation was. And my heart sank. I explained that I was a
    Holocaust historian and that I was appalled by his deeply prejudiced
    views. His rejoinder was that as a writer on the Holocaust it was I
    who should be ashamed of my position, defending the "enemies of the
    Jews" in this fashion.

    My second anecdote: in 1988, during Robert and Elizabeth Maxwell's
    Remembering for the Future conference on the Holocaust at Oxford
    University, a Turkish "scholar" tried to inflict on the workshop I was
    attending an "academic" denial that genocide against the Armenian
    people had taken place some 73 years previously (conservative
    estimates range between 750,000 and 1,250,000 Armenians massacred by
    the Turks, against the camouflage of a world war --sounds familiar?).
    He was refused permission to speak which, ironically, outraged several
    of the liberally-minded academics present, myself included. It was, as
    we discovered later, only the bravery of the American scholar who
    chaired the seminar which had scuppered an unconscionable attempt by
    Robert Maxwell to foist this Turkish apologist for genocide onto his
    own conference.

    Maxwell, the billionaire media entrepreneur, it was rumoured, had been
    engaged in high-level business deals with the Turkish government.

    The Turkish government has elsewhere, of course, been much more
    successful, especially within the United States Congress, at
    sustaining this denial of the Armenian Holocaust. "Who remembers the
    Armenians?" Hitler had asked of his generals in August 1939, preparing
    them for, and seeking to exonerate them of, the "necessary" cruelty
    and barbarism that would follow Nazi Germany's invasion of Poland. To
    judge from the relative neglect of other people's experience of
    genocide by Holocaust museums, educational curricula and remembrance
    events, it would seem almost nobody does -- except often as a token
    gesture.

    I feel it is important to locate the Holocaust, for all its palpable
    uniqueness, within the larger picture of 20th-century genocide, of
    which the Armenian catastrophe was one of the deadliest and, like the
    Nazi Holocaust, "ideological"in nature -- and, as the Hitler quote
    clearly shows, the world's indifference to this terrible event
    provided an instructive precedent for the Nazi death machine.

    In the 1970s the philosopher Emil Fackenheim coined his famous 614th
    Commandment: Jews in the postwar world must not hand Hitler a
    posthumous victory.

    Whatever Fackenheim's original intention may have been, I would
    interpret this "commandment" in two very different ways, which I feel
    sum up a central dilemma facing us all. On the one hand, Jews must do
    everything in their power to survive and not surrender, either to the
    forces of antisemitism, anti-Zionism or wholesale assimilation into
    their host societies; on the other hand, Jews must not themselves
    become brutalised and over-zealous in their own exercise of political
    and military power -- or indifferent to the suffering of others.

    The third edition of Ronnie Landau's work, The Nazi Holocaust: Its
    History And Meaning, will be published by IB Tauris in September

    http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/comment/117790/we-must-not-be-indifferent-others-suffering



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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