The Jerusalem Post

Bennett: Not even the cruelest wars today are like the Holocaust

Solemn nation honors six million victims of the Nazis

- • By ZVIKA KLEIN

prime minister naftali Bennett described the holocaust as a unique event in the annals of war at the ceremony to launch holocaust remembranc­e day, at yad Vashem in jerusalem on wednesday.

the traditiona­l evening event was the first in three years after the previous two had been held on a far more limited scale because of the coVid-19 pandemic.

“my brothers and sisters, the holocaust is an unpreceden­ted event in human history. i emphasize this because as the years go by, there is more discourse in the world that compares other harrowing events to the holocaust. But no, even the most tumultuous of wars today are not the holocaust and are not like the holocaust,” Bennett said.

“no event in history, cruel as it may have been, equals the exterminat­ion of european jews by the nazis and their accomplice­s,” he added.

“the case of the exterminat­ion of the jews is different. never, anywhere else, and at no other time, has one people acted to destroy another in such a planned, systematic and calculatin­g way, driven through absolute ideology and not out of utilitaria­nism.”

the official state ceremony at yad Vashem’s warsaw Ghetto square on the mount of remembranc­e in jerusalem was attended by president isaac herzog, who also delivered remarks, and by other dignitarie­s.

herzog, the first speaker, said: “the state of the jews arose as a lighthouse expressing the victory of light over darkness and promising that never again will a jewish child hide in a dark and isolated cellar from those who want him dead. never again will parents be torn apart from their children and sent on their final steps, simply because they are jews. and never, ever, will depraved murderers stand behind a jewish family, shoot them and dispatch them into the valley of the shadow of death.

“we stand no chance, nor have we any justificat­ion as a people and as a state, if we do not remember forever what happened to our people in the ghettos, in the basements of the Gestapo, in the execution pits, in the death trains, in the exterminat­ion camps, in the crematoria and in every other place where the image of humanity was lost and no trace of compassion survived.”

“casting doubt on israel’s right to exist is not legitimate diplomacy but pure antisemiti­sm, which must be uprooted,” he said. “we must continue fighting against ugly expression­s of antisemiti­sm, which is returning to rear its head in many places in the world, including on social media.”

Bennett’s words were intended to refute the statements of ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, who equated his country’s situation in the current war to the holocaust.

“At the end of the war, the Nazis preferred to invest in the exterminat­ion of Jews, even when it robbed them of energy and resources from [their own] war efforts,” Bennett said. “What brought them to this? Why is the Holocaust the ultimate, absolute expression of thousands of years of antisemiti­sm? Why is there antisemiti­sm?

“How is it that over 3,500 years ago, Pharaoh decided to exterminat­e all the Hebrew males? And 1,000 years later, Haman wanted to exterminat­e all the Jews? And why, 700 years ago, did Britain expel and kill its Jews? And 500 years ago, Spain went on its path, and 350 years ago, so it was in Yemen? What is the motive, what is the reason for all these events? The answer is there is not one. There is no reason for antisemiti­sm.”

“Antisemiti­sm wears a different guise every time it appears,” he said. “Every time we allow ourselves to believe that we have transition­ed to a new age, one that is liberal and modern, one that is void of Jew-hatred, reality alerts us to the truth.

“We need to rely only on ourselves: to be strong and not apologize for our existence or for our successes. We built a strong Jewish state that is flourishin­g. Israel must remain strong. Forever.

“The Jewish nation can exist in the Diaspora and dream of Jerusalem. But at the end of the day, the true and natural existence of our nation can only happen in the physical location of our ancestral homeland – here in the Land of Israel.”

Bennett cited the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, which he said was one of the greatest exhibition­s of Jewish bravery.

“What is discussed far less about the uprising is the fact that when they fought, they did not fight as one unified body, but as competing Jewish factions that did not work together,” Bennett said. “I struggle to understand what ideologica­l difference­s could have been so great they divided the Jews, fighting such a terrible fight. My brothers and sisters, we cannot let the same divisive spirit break Israel up from the inside today.”

Herzog also addressed Holocaust survivors and said: “Our dear Holocaust survivors, even as your numbers dwindle, our obligation­s toward you only grow, and they must be seen and heard from every edge of the earth. You are the pillar of fire before our camp. You provide us with inspiratio­n and hope, and you instill in us faith in the righteousn­ess of our cause and in our willingnes­s to move forward.”

Yad Vashem Council chairman Rabbi Israel Meir Lau kindled the memorial torch, and Moshe Meron spoke on behalf of the survivors. Holocaust survivor Beni Harel recited El Maleh Rahamim, the Jewish prayer for the souls of the martyrs.

Israeli singers Ester Rada and Ron Buchnik, as well as the IDF Paratroope­rs’ Honor Guard, participat­ed in the ceremony, which included narrative pieces by actor Noa Koler. The MC was Dani Cushmaro.

At 10 a.m. on Thursday, a two-minute siren will be heard across Israel, followed by a ceremony at Yad Vashem’s Warsaw Ghetto Square in the presence of the president, prime minister, Knesset speaker and Supreme Court president.

On Thursday, Polish President Andrzej Duda will take part in the March of the Living at the

Auschwitz-Birkenau concentrat­ion camp. Participan­ts of the March will cover the three-kilometer stretch leading from the Arbeit macht frei gate at the former German Auschwitz I camp to the former Auschwitz II-Birkenau site.

This year, the march will take place in Auschwitz and Birkenau after a two-year break caused by the COVID–19 pandemic.

Jerusalem Post Staff contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? SURVIVOR OLGA KAY, accompanie­d by her daughter, lights one of the six beacons at the Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembranc­e Day opening ceremony at Yad Vashem yesterday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) SURVIVOR OLGA KAY, accompanie­d by her daughter, lights one of the six beacons at the Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembranc­e Day opening ceremony at Yad Vashem yesterday.

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