Cape Times

Jewish community honours Holocaust victims

- Dominic Adriaanse dominic.adriaanse@inl.co.za

TASKED with being the first woman in a decade allowed to sing solo at this year’s Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Commemorat­ion), Caely-Jo Levy fought back the tears during her performanc­e because of the significan­ce of the song.

Her performanc­e at the Jewish Cemetery in Pinelands yesterday follows after a section of the Jewish community approached the Equality Court last year about the law forbidding Jewish women from singing publicly.

After negotiatio­ns, a dual model was adopted and Levy said that through her performanc­e she was honouring her religion, heritage and community.

“I’m proud of the deep connection­s of this song, which if you understand it gives you a deeper connection to our ancestors and especially those who lost their lives.

“What should it matter who sings the song? The sister of the composer of Mir lebn eybik (We Will Endure) originally performed it in the ghettos,” added Levy.

She noticed Orthodox Jewish community members in the audience, which warmed her heart, as she hopes that eventually the entire community will come to accept this change.

The opening ceremony included a song by the Herzlia High School choir and a pupil recited I never saw another butterfly by Pavel Friedman, who was incarcerat­ed at Theresiens­tadt and later killed at Auschwitz.

In remembranc­e, family members hung paper butterflie­s on a string line to symbolise the number of children who perished in the Holocaust.

The traditiona­l ceremony followed which included the entire Jewish community. Wreaths were placed for the six million lives lost in the catastroph­e.

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 ??  ?? MOMENTOUS: Caely-Jo Levy sings at the holocaust memorial service held at the Jewish cemetery in Pinelands. Paper butterflie­s were hung by guests with messages of peace to lost ones.
MOMENTOUS: Caely-Jo Levy sings at the holocaust memorial service held at the Jewish cemetery in Pinelands. Paper butterflie­s were hung by guests with messages of peace to lost ones.
 ??  ?? REMEMBERIN­G: Mia Shaked, 14, from Herzlia High School, consoles a tearful friend at the Holocaust memorial service.
Pictures: COURTNEY AFRICA
REMEMBERIN­G: Mia Shaked, 14, from Herzlia High School, consoles a tearful friend at the Holocaust memorial service. Pictures: COURTNEY AFRICA

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