The Jerusalem Post

The other genocide

- Momijian. Ihrig Michael Melchior, David Friedman Donald Trump. Marine Le Pen Tsolag Stefan Hélène Le Gal Gauck, Jacques Chirac Serge Reuven Rivlin Beate Klarsfeld Joachim Barak, Aharon Ronald S. Lauder Livnat. Limor Gili Tamir, Daniel Ben-Simon Yifat B

One of its greatest anomalies is that while leaving no stone unturned in the effort to make the world realize the suffering endured by the Jewish people in and as a result of the Holocaust, Israel to this day refuses to recognize the Armenian Genocide as more than a massacre.

In many circles, the reason attributed to this head-in-the-sand attitude is politics. Israel does not want to offend the Turks. But that is ridiculous. Just as Israel acknowledg­es that the Germany and Austria of today are not the Germany and Austria of the first half of the 1940s, the Armenians are equally aware that Turkey of today is not that of the Ottoman Empire of more than a century ago.

Equally curious is the fact that while both Israel and the United States do not officially recognize the Armenian Genocide, the media in both countries make reference to it year after year – and no one stops them.

As it happens, the anniversar­y of the Armenian Genocide this year coincided with Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, and a number of Israelis of the Jewish faith attended Armenian memorial events in Jerusalem, which is home to the Armenian Church and to the honorary consul of Armenia,

An event that took place on Monday at the Jerusalem Nature Museum was attended by Rabbi a former government minister and a highly respected interfaith and intercultu­ral activist who seeks to promote understand­ing and harmony between people of different faiths and different cultural and social background­s. Melchior told Channel 1 that “it is our obligation as Jews who have suffered atrocities to recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

Every nation and every people that have suffered huge losses, not only in human terms but also territoria­l, need understand­ing and empathy. That doesn’t mean that everyone has to accept their narratives. What needs to be accepted is their pain.

On Tuesday evening there was a memorial event at Belgium House on the Hebrew University’s Edmond Safra Campus in Jerusalem’s Givat Ram. This event was organized by HU’s Institute of Asian and African Studies – The Program in Armenian Studies, the Hebrew University-Hadassah Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine and the Jerusalem Center for Genocide Prevention. The keynote speaker, Prof.

of the University of Haifa, sounded a warning in the title of his address, “The Armenian Genocide and the World We (Still) Live In.”

Even though Israel fails to recognize the Armenian Genocide, it is not illegal to talk about it, write about it or commemorat­e it. But talk about the Nakba – that’s another ball game. Just as one man’s meat is another man’s poison, so Israel’s victory in the War of Independen­ce was what the Arab residents of this country, not to mention our Palestinia­n neighbors, continue to regard as a catastroph­e. While the majority of Israelis might reject the Arab narrative, there is no reason to reject their pain. How can we ask them to respect our pain, if we can’t respect theirs?

SO FAR 46 American states have recognized the Armenian Genocide, and there is no doubt that after US Ambassador-designate

presents his credential­s on June 15, local Armenian representa­tives will try to impress on him the need to convince President

FRENCH AMBASSADOR attended the annual Holocaust Remembranc­e Day event held in the Roglit Forest in the Eila Valley by the Associatio­n of Sons and Daughters of Jewish Deportees from France. While French presidenti­al candidate

denies French responsibi­lity for what happened to French Jews during the Holocaust, Le Gal thinks otherwise. On July 16 and 17, 1942, French officials ordered Jews to be rounded up, and 13,000 Jews, including 4,000 children from Paris and environs, were deported. Not a single one of them returned, she said. The roundup is documented in French history as Velodrome d’Hiver. In July 1995, then-president apologized for France’s role in the persecutio­n of Jews and its complicity in sending 76,000 French and foreign Jews to the Auschwitz death camp. Chirac had called it a stain on the nation. Only 2,500 returned, said Le Gal. The French authoritie­s of that time betrayed the Jewish community, she charged, emphasizin­g that not a single German soldier participat­ed in the crime of Velodrome d’Hiver.

Referring to those French citizens who continue to defend French values and ideals, Le Gal said that the only ones who deserve that honor are the Righteous Among the Nations.

Le Gal also spoke of the challenges of perpetuati­ng the memory and lessons of the Holocaust, especially now with the resurgence of antisemiti­sm. In this context, she emphasized the importance of teaching from a very early age. Another challenge, she said, was completing the work of restitutio­n and to return property owned by Jews before the war.

Also participat­ing in the ceremony were famed Nazi hunters and

who have documented many aspects of the Holocaust in their writings. Serge Klarsfeld is president of the associatio­n, which he helped to found.

WITHOUT MENTIONING her name, President on Monday night lashed out against Le Pen at the closing Holocaust Remembranc­e Day ceremony at Ghetto Fighters’ House Museum in Kibbutz Lohamei Hagetaot. Rivlin pointed to the emergence of a new form of Holocaust denial. The prevalent message arising from recent political statements is uniquely disturbing, and in every place that message is the same, he said, citing several examples that boil down to: “We are not responsibl­e for the Holocaust. We are not responsibl­e for the exterminat­ion of the Jewish people that occurred within our borders.” Rivlin specifical­ly referred to “a French presidenti­al candidate” who has denied France’s responsibi­lity for the deportatio­n of its Jewish citizens to the Nazi concentrat­ion and death camps. “A member of her party denied not only French involvemen­t in the deportatio­n of the Jews to destructio­n, but their very murder,” thundered Rivlin.

But he noted that elsewhere in Europe, the situation is not much different. In Poland, the debate surroundin­g the involvemen­t of the local population in the persecutio­n and murder of Jews has become a political issue of the first order. In Ukraine, elected officials were enraged by Rivlin’s speech before the Ukrainian parliament, when he recalled that many of those who collaborat­ed with the Nazis were Ukrainian, and among them those who betrayed and slaughtere­d Jews, and in many cases turned them over to the Germans, he said.

Conceding that the responsibi­lity is not equal, Rivlin stated that while Israel does not demand from any nation other than Germany that responsibi­lity be taken for the systematic planning and the implementa­tion of the Final Solution, Israel nonetheles­s does call for moral internal reflection from all those who assisted in carrying out the systematic annihilati­on.

“The denial of responsibi­lity for the crimes committed in the days of the Second World War is Holocaust denial of a new, more destructiv­e and dangerous kind from that we have known till now,” he said, noting that “this is not a denial of the very existence of the Holocaust, but a denial of the distinctio­n between a victim and a criminal. This is a denial that seeks to annul the political and moral responsibi­lity that must stand at the heart of memory of the Holocaust for generation­s to come. Victimizat­ion is the most comprehens­ive and effective note of exemption from responsibi­lity.” Former president of Germany

a dedicated civil rights activist, was invited by Rivlin to come to Israel to participat­e in some of the memorial ceremonies. “Today, on Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, I pay my respects to those who were once ostracized, humiliated, persecuted and murdered by another Germany, because they were Jews,” said Gauck. “I will never think of those inhuman actions with anything but a pronounced sense of horror and profound sadness.” As president, he said, he had made a point of returning to the scenes of these horrific events and mass murders perpetrate­d by Germans, met with survivors, listened to them and cried with them. “I will never forget their stories. But above all, I will never forget their willingnes­s to reach out in friendship to the Germans of today,” he said.

When he was young, he and millions of other Germans began to read about and realize what Germans before them had done, he said. “There was a time when I was ashamed to be German. I was unable to like my country. I hated it. My generation viewed our parents with disgust. They disclaimed all culpabilit­y, they allegedly knew nothing. The majority of them still maintained this silence in the 1950s and ’60s and refused to accept responsibi­lity for what had happened.”

Surmising that he is the last president of Germany to have been born during the Holocaust, Gauck said that “even future generation­s of Germans will not have an identity unblemishe­d by Auschwitz. The special and lasting connection between our peoples and Germany’s particular solidarity with the democratic State of Israel will remain part of their identity.”

ONLY ON Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, when one sees the thousands of people who flock to memorial events in different parts of the country, does one realize the extent to which the bulk of Israel’s population has a personal, emotional stake in mourning the past. Even among our public figures, there are still so many first-, second- and third-generation Holocaust survivors, and so many more with lower public profiles.

Among the first-generation survivors is former Supreme Court president Prof.

who is currently a senior researcher at the Radzyner Law School at the Interdisci­plinary Center Herzliya. Barak, who was a child Holocaust survivor, shared some of his experience­s at the IDC memorial gathering.

Barak was only eight years old when his parents managed to smuggle him out of the Kaunas Ghetto by hiding him in a sack delivering Nazi soldiers’ uniforms. He subsequent­ly hid with his mother for six months behind a double wall in the home of a Lithuanian peasant family, which was later recognized as Righteous Among the Nations.

Barak said that years later, he and his family met with the children of the righteous Lithuanian­s: “I asked them: Why did you save us? If you were caught, you would have been shot to death. How did your parents agree to take such a risk? I looked at my children and asked them: Would I be able to do the same? But I did not have an answer. Every survivor has his story, and every such story is a miracle, or luck, depending on his outlook.

“Each and every one of us can decide what to take from this. My lesson was never hatred, vengeance or loss of trust in humans. My lesson was the importance of the State of Israel, because if it existed then, even if the Holocaust was unavoidabl­e, things must have been different.

“Another lesson, which my students know too well, is the importance of human dignity. The Germans took our lives, but they failed in taking our dignity away. This is why I highly value human dignity, human rights and national security. But also the importance of protecting every person’s rights. Therefore my main lesson to you: If we do not defend democracy, democracy will not defend us.”

FOLLOWING HIS reelection for a third term as president of the World Jewish Congress, at the WJC’s 15th world plenary in New York, attended by more than 600 delegates from 90 countries, said: “I have done many things in my life, but there is no accomplish­ment, no title, no honor that I am more proud of than being president of the World Jewish Congress .... We are one people, and we take care of each other.”

Lauder spoke of the antisemiti­sm, anti-Zionism and demonizati­on of Israel which continue to challenge the Jewish people and the WJC, albeit in a new form. He also spoke of the growth in size and strength of the WJC during the 10 years of his presidency, including the launching of a security department working in tandem with government­s around the world to protect Jewish communitie­s, and expanding diplomatic work to meet with important internatio­nal and government leaders across the globe to advocate in behalf of the Jewish people.

Lauder still has a way to go to equal the number of years at the helm of the WJC of his predecesso­r, the late Edgar Bronfman, and like Bronfman, continues to courageous­ly battle the injustices inflicted on Jews in places where they still suffer discrimina­tion.

It is interestin­g that this year marks the 30th anniversar­y, almost to the day, of Bronfman declaring at a meeting of the WJC that Austrian president Kurt Waldheim was “part and parcel of the Nazi killing machine.”

YEAR AFTER year, and not only during the days immediatel­y before and after Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, the Israeli media focus on the fact that Holocaust survivors are being denied their dignity in the Jewish homeland, of all places. While many were able to pick up the threads of their lives and weave them into productivi­ty and creativity resulting in three-, four- and even five-generation families and a comfortabl­e lifestyle, others can barely survive on their meager financial resources.

It’s not that the money isn’t there. It’s just that the bureaucrat­ic barriers are such that it’s almost impossible to get past them. Many survivors do not know their rights, and even if they do, they may not know where to turn. Several newspaper advertisem­ents offering help to survivors are in fact placed by lawyers who charge handsomely for their services, which many survivors cannot afford. Then there are not-for-profit organizati­ons which unfortunat­ely are staffed by people who have little patience or understand­ing for what they are supposed to be doing, and the survivor is often more confused at the end of conversati­ons with such people than he or she was at the beginning.

One organizati­on that is genuinely dedicated to helping – and does help – is the Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims in Israel, whose chairwoman is former education, culture and sport minister

The foundation was establishe­d in 1994 by survivors for survivors, and its activities include providing nursing assistance in survivors’ homes, grants, and refunds for essential expenses such as a hearing aids or medical treatment, emergency alert buttons, financial assistance with dental care, eyeglasses, home renovation­s and other essentials. It also sends volunteer groups to help survivors with day-to-day needs, including shopping or simply someone with whom to socialize; gives free legal assistance to survivors and operates social clubs for them.

The foundation works with numerous partners and several municipali­ties, and according to Livnat there is money for survivor needs and there are many knowledgea­ble and experience­d volunteers on hand who are ready to help them. In an interview on Israel Radio, Livnat said she had heard so often of the abject poverty in which thousands of Holocaust survivors were living that she felt drawn to do something for them when she quit politics. To contact the foundation, call (03) 609-0866.

Another source for informatio­n Radio’s Reshet Bet, where a consultant on social welfare, has a program called “Magia lecha” (It’s due you), in which she advises listeners with specific problems of their rights with regard to pensions, grants, insurance, caregivers, etc. On Monday night of this week, she devoted her program to the rights of Holocaust survivors and had more inquiries by phone, Facebook and email than ever before. She will continue to deal with this subject on Thursday night of this week. is Israel

ON THURSDAY of last week, prior to the opening Holocaust Remembranc­e Day ceremony at Yad Vashem that took place on Sunday, Prime Minister

and his wife, met at the Prime Minister’s Office with the survivors who were chosen as torch lighters.

“There is hardly a day when world leaders, presidents, prime ministers, foreign ministers and other leaders do not come here and come to learn from the State of Israel,” he said. “There is great admiration for the State of Israel. ‘But how did you do that?’ they ask. ‘You were dust, ashes?’ So I look at you and I ask, ‘How did you do that?’ Because what we did afterwards is nothing compared to your great deeds, and that is the great story of rebirth. There is no real explanatio­n for this miracle.”

IT’S TAKEN a long time for the Middle East and North Africa communitie­s in Israel to gain the recognitio­n they deserve. With the exception of a few of their most outstandin­g representa­tives, who somehow managed to overcome the Ashkenazi barriers to higher education and white collar profession­s, a lot of talented people had to change their names in order to get a foot in the door. Names like Buzaglo, Abecassis, Abergil, Amsalem, Bohbot, Bouskila, Shabi, Shenhav, Hisda and Abaya were betrayers of origin, and job applicants with these or similar names were often turned away without even being considered. Even today, there are stories of people applying for a job and being rejected, and then reapplying under an Ashkenazi or Hebrew pseudonym and being accepted.

Two events this week, cast some light on achievemen­ts by MENA personalit­ies. The first, on Thursday, April 27, at Mishkenot Sha’ananim in Jerusalem, is a book launch of The Moroccans (Hebrew) by journalist and former MK and includes among the speakers Ben-Simon himself, celebrated lawyer and Prof. from the College of Management. The moderator will be political strategist

On Friday, April 28, Tzavta in Tel Aviv will host an event under the title “From Iraq to Israel,” featuring some of Israel’s bestknown Iraqi-born citizens or those of Iraqi parentage, including: a former secret agent, government minister, diplomat and world chairman of United Israel Appeal; a prizewinni­ng author, who will be among the beacon lighters on Independen­ce Day; the prizewinni­ng military reporter for Israel Radio; and MK and academic

What spoils it though is that the moderator is who, though she will do a thoroughly profession­al job, does not have a drop of Iraqi blood.

GLOBALIZAT­ION MAY, in all probabilit­y, have had its genesis through diplomacy. Foreign liaisons are, after all, based on common interests and values. Thus, there is increasing evidence in Israel of foreign envoys becoming involved in Israeli issues on many levels.

Notwithsta­nding the close relations that exist between Israel and Cyprus, and which also existed before either achieved independen­ce from British dominance, there was a period when relations were not exactly friendly; but that is now covered by the dust of history. Under the current relationsh­ip, it comes as no surprise that on Thursday of this week, the ambassador of Cyprus, is hosting a panel discussion headed “Israeli Women Leading the Way – Achievemen­ts and Challenges of Women Leaders in Israel.”

The event, which is being co-hosted with The Israel Project, will feature a panel discussion led by director of the Israel Institute for Innovative Diplomacy; Dr. an expert on intercultu­ral strategies; and

talk show host, journalist, investor and socialite. The audience will be encouraged to add their voices to the discussion.

 ?? (Mark Neyman/GPO) ?? FORMER GERMAN PRESIDENT Joachim Gauck with President Reuven Rivlin.
(Mark Neyman/GPO) FORMER GERMAN PRESIDENT Joachim Gauck with President Reuven Rivlin.
 ?? (Courtesy French Embassy) ?? FRENCH AMBASSADOR Hélène Le Gal at the Holocaust commemorat­ion in the KKL-JNF Roglit Forest in the Eila Valley.
(Courtesy French Embassy) FRENCH AMBASSADOR Hélène Le Gal at the Holocaust commemorat­ion in the KKL-JNF Roglit Forest in the Eila Valley.

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