Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust Museum, betrays the memory of those who died in Auschwitz & Treblinka
In April 1976 Israel's Labor Government under Yithzak Rabin, invited
John Vorster, Prime Minister of South Africa to pay a state visit to Israel.
‘South Africa became Israel's sole substantive
supporter on the continent and one of the few governments anywhere not calling
for her withdrawal from occupied Arab territory.’
John Vorster with Israeli Labour Govt. Ministers Yitzhak Rabin (right) and Moshe Dayan (with eyepatch) and Menachem Begin future Likud PM (left)
South Africa and
Israel already had a strong commercial and military (including nuclear)
relationship. Israel and South Africa were ideological and political twins. As
the architect of Apartheid, Prime Minister Dr Hendrik Verwoerd observed
in 1961
‘The Jews took Israel from the
Arabs after the Arabs had lived there for a thousand years. Israel, like South Africa, is an apartheid state.’
By 1976, at a time
when most Western states were reducing their military relationship with South
Africa, Israel was strengthening theirs. In 1977 the voluntary UN arms embargo
on South Africa was made compulsory. This merely proved an incentive for Israel
to intensify its military relationship with South Africa and break the arms embargo.
This was done under an Israeli Labor Government. Brothers in arms - Israel's secret pact with
Pretoria
During the war Vorster
had been a General
in the para-military wing of the Ossewabrandwag, which conducted sabotage operations against the British war
effort. In 1942 Vorster was interned for his pro-Nazi
sympathies. None of this prevented Vorster from paying the obligatory
visit to Yad Vashem, [YV] Israel’s Holocaust memorial museum and laying a
wreath in memory of the victims of those whom he had supported.
The late Professor
Israel Shahak of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, who was a child survivor
of the Warsaw Ghetto and Belsen-Bergen concentration camp, wrote:
‘Of the Yad Vashem…
theatre, I do not wish to speak, at all. It, and its vile exploiting, such as
honouring South Africa collaborators with the Nazis are truly beneath contempt. [Kol Hair, 19 May 1998, Jerusalem].
YV is situated adjacent to the site of Deir Yassin, a village where
in April 1948 the Zionist terror groups Irgun and Lehi carried out a horrific massacre killing
up to 254 men, women and children. In 2009 YV fired a guide, Itamar Shapira, who
had dared to mention to visitors the proximity of YV to Deir Yassin.
Any independent or
reputable academic institute or museum connected with the Holocaust, both of
which YV purports to be, would have welcomed someone who drew parallels between
what happened to the Jews under the Nazis and other victims of racism and
fascism. If YV retained an ounce of independence or autonomy it would have
refused to welcome those who still cling to the ideas neo-Nazism and racial
supremacy.
However YV cannot do
that because it was set up as a specifically Zionist institute. It
depends for 40% of its income from a government which officially believes in
the segregation of Arabs and Jews and which has, within the past month, increased
the number of Jewish communities entitled to reject Arabs as members. It is
verboten therefore to draw any parallels between the treatment of Jews
under anti-Semitic regimes and that of non-Jews, especially the Palestinians, under
Israel’s racist regime.
YV’s
absurd position is that ‘the
Holocaust cannot be politicized or equated with any other event.’ as if the
Holocaust wasn’t itself a product of the political situation in Europe in the
last century. If the Holocaust is unique then there are no universal lessons
that can be drawn from it other than that Jews will always be the victims of
anti-Semitism whilst they live among non-Jews. Thwe uniqueness of the Holocaust
is very convenient because it means that growing Israeli fascism and Zionist
racism is immune from any historical study or comparison. It is a 'get out of
gaol free' card for Israel's treatment of the Palestinians. Itamar Shapira said
of YV that
"It
is being hypocritical. I only tried to expose the visitors to the facts, not to
political conclusions. If Yad Vashem chooses to ignore the facts, for example
the massacre at Dir Yassin, or the Nakba ["The Catastrophe," the
Palestinians' term for what happened to them after 1948], it means that it's
afraid of something and that its historic approach is flawed."
YV was established by
the Martyrs' and Heroes Remembrance (Yad Vashem) Law
5713-1953. In Israel the Holocaust is highly politicized. It is not a neutral academic subject but a propaganda weapon in
the hands of the State. It is the justification for Israel’s very existence and
also for every Israeli war crime. According to the myth of Israel’s victimhood,
every crisis it faces is an existentialist one, comparable to the Holocaust. Israel’s
enemies are always compared
to Hitler
and the Nazis.
Israel’s conflicts with the Palestinians are not those of a settler colonial
state stealing the land of the natives but a rerun of the Nazi destruction of
the Jews. As Israeli Professor Edit Zertal observed [Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood, p.100, CUP, 2011]:
‘The transference of the
Holocaust situation on to the Middle East reality… not only created a false
sense of the imminent danger of mass destruction. It also immensely distorted
the image of the Holocaust, dwarfed the magnitude of the atrocities committed
by the Nazis, trivializing the unique agony of the victims and the survivors,
and utterly demonizing the Arabs and their leaders.’
Zertal wrote that
there hasn’t been a war involving Israel ‘that has not been perceived,
defined, and conceptualized in terms of the Holocaust.’ Israel has
mobilised the Holocaust ‘in the service of Israeli politics.’ [pp. 4,
91]
Yet this is not about
the Holocaust but about the Zionist exploitation of the Holocaust. That
is why Israel’s concern for the sanctity and uniqueness of the Holocaust
contrasts with its shameful treatment of the Holocaust survivors who live in
Israel. When Holocaust survivors began arriving in Palestine after 1945 they
were treated with contempt and called 'sapon' (soap) after the myth that
the bodies of those the Nazis murdered had been turned into soap. [Tom Segev,
The Seventh Million, p.183]. Hanzi Brand wrote of how, when she settled on
Kibbutz Gvata Haim, the other members ‘talked
about their war to avoid hearing about hers. They were ashamed of the
Holocaust.’ [Segev p. 471]
Today, when the word
'anti-Semitism' is on the lips of every Zionist propagandist, it is forgotten
that when anti-Semitism was a dominant form of racism, Zionism was not
interested in opposing it. That is what distinguished Zionism from every other
Jewish political movement. Zionism began from the perspective that anti-Semitism
was impossible to fight. Antisemitism was held to be ingrained in non-Jews. In
the words of Zionism's founder, Theodor Herzl, it was 'futile'
to oppose anti-Semitism.
Although the Holocaust
is mercilessly exploited by Zionist propaganda today, when the Holocaust was happening
the Zionist leaders were indifferent to what was happening. Indeed they denied there
was a Holocaust. As Israeli historian, Yigal Elam wrote:
When the demonstrations and
protest actions against the Nazi regime of terror reached their climax, the
voice of Zionism was not to be heard. [Introduction to Zionist History, Tel
Aviv, 1972, pp. 113, 122]
Tom Segev, a
journalist and one of the new Israeli historians wrote in The Seventh
Million that the Zionist leadership of the Jewish Agency and Mapai, the
Israeli Labour Party
'instead of thinking of the
Holocaust in terms that would require effective and immediate action, exiled it
from real time into history. Thus the first press report of the murder of Jews
in mobile gas chambers was worded as though it were a story that happened long
ago:... With the Holocaust still raging, the leaders of the yishuv and opinion
makers indicted themselves for apathy and for their failure to rescue the
Jews.' (p.103)
Despite his role as an
apologist for all manner of Zionist atrocities, Ellie Wiesel, who survived
Auschwitz and the Hungarian Holocaust, praised Segev's book in a review in the
Los Angeles Times (The
Land that Broke its Promise, LA Times 23rd May 1993)
In October 2016 there
was one of these artificial Zionist furors when a Rabbi stated, at a meeting
chaired by Baroness Jenny Tonge, that the Holocaust was a punishment from God. This
was the purest hypocrisy. [Party
suspends UK baroness after meeting where Jews were blamed for Holocaust] On
27th November 1942 the Histadrut paper Davar
published an article 'describing the extermination of the Jews as
"punishment from heaven" for not having come to Palestine.' (Segev
p.98). Which is almost a mirror image of the
sermon by Pastor John Hagee of Christians United for Israel that Hitler was
an agent of God sent to drive the Jews to Palestine.
Untold millions of
shekels which Germany paid in reparations to Israel and the Zionist movement for
the benefit of the Holocaust survivors has been stolen by the Israeli state and
Zionist organisations such as the Jewish Claims Conference,
which has been the centre of repeated scandals. See Fraud
at the Jewish Claims Conference Spiegel online, 15.11.10. and Holocaust
Claims Conference Fraud Likely ‘Much Higher’ Than $57 Million Yardena
Schwartz describes
in The Tablet how a report by
Israel’s Welfare Minister Haim Katz in April 2016 revealed that 20,000
Holocaust survivors had been defrauded by the State of more than $30 million,
yet it was:
a
testament to how invisible survivors are in Israeli society, and how apathetic
the public is to their plight, Katz’s report made absolutely no waves in the
Israeli media. It should be news that Holocaust survivors are being left to die
in poverty, all while their legacy is used as a justification for the existence
of the nation that has so badly neglected them.
Since the end of
WWII, Germany has paid
more than $78.4 billion in reparations and compensation for survivors of Nazi
persecution. 40% of those funds, or about $31 billion, were allocated to
Holocaust victims in Israel. Yet rather than going solely to individual
Holocaust survivors, these funds have been primarily funneled through the
Israeli government and the Jewish Claims Conference, an agency founded in 1951.
According to the Holocaust Survivors Rights Authority, the Israeli governmental
agency entrusted with the issue of Holocaust survivors, there are about 200,000
Holocaust survivors living in Israel, nearly a third of whom live below the
poverty line.
This should be no
surprise. The Holocaust is not about what happened to the Jews of Europe and
the destruction of the Jewish communities of Europe, the actual victims, but
about the creation of a myth of the Holocaust and Jewish peoplehood. The Holocaust
has been used ideologically by Israeli and the West to justify racism against the
outsider - Muslims and others.
Italy's Matteo Salvini and his ideological
How else can one
explain the fact that the Roma, who were also victims of the Holocaust, in
proportions similar to those of the Jews, are never mentioned? Matteo Salvini,
the Deputy Prime Minister of Italy and member of the far-Right Northern
Leagues, promised
to expel thousands of non-Italian Roma from Italy. This is the same Matteo
Salvini whom Netanyahu described as “a great friend of Israel.” at their meeting this
week. [Times
of Israel, 12.12.18.]
The
Zionist attitude to the Holocaust was summed up by Gerhard Riegner, World
Jewish Congress representative who was based in Switzerland during the War. It
was Riegner's
telegram, which was sent to London and Washington in August 1942, which confirmed
that the the deliberate extermination of European Jewry had begun in earnest.
The telegram was sat on by Rabbi Stephen Wise, leader of American Zionism, at
the request of the State Department until November 1942. In that 3 months
probably 1 million Jews were murdered. Riegner was of the opinion that '
Auschwitz was not only a
national memory belonging to the Jewish people that should not be taken by
anyone else; it was also an important political asset. Among other things it
served the diplomatic efforts of both the World Jewish Congress and Israel.' [Interview with Riegner,
Segev, p 474]
Below is an article
by Daniel Blatman, Professor in Holocaust Studies at the Hebrew University,
Jerusalem. Blatman has repeatedly warned that Israel is heading down the same
road that Germany and other European states took in the 1930’s. He wrote of Bezalel Smotrich, a Knesset member for Habayit HaYehudi
(Jewish Home), that:
Smotrich’s admiration for
the biblical genocidaire Joshua bin Nun leads him to adopt values that resemble
those of the German SS.
Blatman has himself
transgressed, a number of times the stipulations in the intellectually bankrupt
IHRA definition of anti-Semitism by comparing Israeli politics to those of Nazi
Germany, for example The
Rights and Wrongs of Comparing Israel to Nazi Germany
Blatman has been
appointed as the Chief Historian to the proposed Holocaust museum in Warsaw.
The Israeli Holocaust Establishment centred around YV are up in arms. Professor
Hava Dreifuss has raised the question of political interference from the Polish
government. Blatman retorted that people in glass houses should not throw stones. Blatman describes YV, for whom Dreifuss works
as a
hard-working laundromat,
striving to bleach out the sins of every anti-Semitic, fascist, racist or simply
murderously thuggish leader or politician like Hungary’s Viktor Orban, the
Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte and Italy’s Matteo Salvini.
YV has committed all
the sins that Dreifuss attributes to the putative Warsaw Ghetto museum. It has
hosted a whole swathe of far-Right leaders, some of whom like Viktor Orban have
dabbled in pro-Nazi politics. Orban, who paid a state visit to Israel in July
also visited YV. He was greeted by a demonstration
which included survivors of the Holocaust. Orban has gone on record as
describing Admiral Horthy, the war-time pro-Nazi ruler of Hungary, who oversaw
the deportation of 437,000 Jews to Auschwitz, as an ‘exceptional
statesman.'
There is a political
irony here because when Poland's far-Right Law and Justice Party passed a Holocaust law at
the end of January making it a criminal offence to say that Poles took part in
the Holocaust, Netanyahu rushed to reach an agreement with the Polish
Government. In exchange for dropping the penalty of imprisonment, the Israeli
state accepted the law despite vigorous condemnation even by Yehuda Bauer, the
Dean of Israel's holocaust historians. Bauer, who is an appalling apologist for
the role of Zionism during the Holocaust called the Israeli State's agreement
with the far-Right holocaust revisionists of the Polish Government a 'betrayal':
Bauer said that by signing the declaration,
Israel had betrayed Polish historians who had been persecuted by the Polish
government because they “tell the truth.”
He was referring to scholars such as Prof. Jan Tomasz Gross and Jan Grabowsky,
who have researched Polish involvement in the murder of Jews during the
Holocaust.
Yet who was it who
signed up to Netanyahu’s agreement? Dina
Porat, YV's Chief historian. This agreement was savaged by
YV's other historians thus demonstrating the disarray in YV today at
Netanyahu's courting of Europe's far-Right.
Daniel Blatman
Blatman cites an
article in the New York Times by Matti Friedman describing the atmosphere among
workers at YV. [What Happens When a Holocaust Memorial Plays Host to
Autocrats] They are afraid that the Israeli government, in the form
of far-Right Education Minister Naftali Bennett, is about to impose a new
Director at YV in the place of the current 80 year old Avner Shalev .
Friedman described a
mood of frustration, fear and demoralization among the employees because the
current nationalist government has turned YV into a political tool reminiscent
of history museums in totalitarian countries.
In what is a
devastating critique of how YV has acted as a propaganda organisation, fine
tuning the Holocaust to Israel’s current political needs, Blatman writes that:
Yad Vashem is now paying
the price of the many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional, simplistic
message that there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust. Today, the
institution is apparently willing to place its reputation for Holocaust
research, which it has built over many years, at the service of a government
that has recruited it to accuse anyone who criticizes Israel of anti-Semitism. So
it’s no wonder that its researchers have become partisan explainers of the
Holocaust.
YV historians, from Yehuda Bauer down were
always politically partisan putting forward a view of the Holocaust that chimed
with Zionism’s political needs. For example they defended the Judenrat (Jewish
Councils) in the Nazi ghettos, two-thirds of whom were Zionists and criticised
Raul Hilberg, the most eminent of all Holocaust historians, for his assertion that
the Judenrate were an essential cog in the Nazi destruction process.
Likewise YV has all
but written out of its historical accounts the anti-Zionist and non-Zionist
contributions to resistance to Nazism, for example that of the Bund, who led
the Warsaw ghetto resistance. For years YV, under Yehuda Bauer, even erased the
very names of the two Jewish escapees from Auschwitz in April 1944, Rudolph
Vrba and Alfred Wexler. [See Ruth Linn, Escaping Auschwitz - A Culture of
Forgetting, 2004] The reason was that the leader of Hungarian Zionism, Rudolf
Kasztner, who was the subject of a 4 year trial in Israel (1954-58) for
collaboration, had suppressed the Auschwitz
Protocols that Vrba and Wexler wrote which told of the preparations the
Nazis were making to exterminate Europe's last major Jewish community. Vrba and
Wexler were not Zionists. See Hungary, Auschwitz and Rewriting the Holocaust
Not once have YV's
historians, from Bauer to Porat to Dreifuss
protested about visitors like Viktor Orban or Austrian Chancellor Kurz,
who is in a coalition government with the neo-Nazi Freedom Party. Or indeed
Philippines dictator Rodrigo Duterte who has openly compared himself to Hitler.
A Hitler Admirer at Yad Vashem
YV is, in essence,
complaining that Israel’s monopoly on the Holocaust is being broken. The
Holocaust has become part of the new Western political identity.
First a Holocaust
Museum was initiated by Jimmy Carter in Washington DC. Israel could hardly
object because the USA is Israel’s main benefactor. But now Hungary’s Orban and
Poland’s Law & Justice Government are establishing their own Holocaust
museums. Even worse they are not prepared to allow Israel to define their
message as they too wish to harness the Holocaust to their own nationalist
narrative. The Holocaust does not simply belong to Zionism and Israel but to
all sorts of reactionary regimes, all of whom Israel has close relationships
with.
It remains to be seen
how a Holocaust revisionist like Viktor Orban handles the Holocaust with his
new Museum, the House
of Fates. The dilemma is such that the Museum has had its brand new building
lying empty for three years whilst this dilemma is resolved.
What is clear is that
Poland is not willing to be dictated to by Israel. Although the Polish government
professes otherwise, the Holocaust is clearly being summoned in aid of a Polish
nationalist narrative, albeit one in which the Poles also suffered grievously under
the Nazis (up to 3 million Poles were murdered). Poland's government has hired
a dissident Israeli historian, Daniel Blatman, to be the chief historian of the
Museum of the History of Polish Jews. This has produced a furious reaction by YV's
historians and their Polish apologists. Why Is This Israeli Jewish Scholar a
Willing Poster Boy for Poland's Brutal Distortion of the Holocaust?
The problem that faces
the Museum is that Poland before WW2 was a byword for anti-Semitism. In the
universities there were ghetto benches for Jewish students. Pogroms led by the
Endeks (National
Democratic Party) and the National Radical
Camp were a regular occurrence. E.g. Poland
Does Nothing to Check Anti-semitic Drive of the Endeks, Jewish Telegraph
Agency, JTA 7.8.1934.
It was in this
situation that Zionism, which had a mass base in the 1920's declined as the
Bund, an anti-Zionist Jewish party came to the fore. It was the Bund who led
the Warsaw Ghetto Resistance despite the best efforts of Israel and YV to erase
the Bund from history. In the last free elections in Poland in 1938, the Bund won
17 out of the 20 Jewish council seats in Warsaw compared to just one for the Zionists.
The last Commander of
the Jewish Resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto, Marek
Edelman died a non-person in Israel. He received a 15 gun state funeral in
Poland but not one Israeli government representative, not even the lowliest
clerk at the Israeli Embassy attended. Zionism
Boycotts the Funeral of Marek Edelman This year was the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto
Resistance. You would be forgiven for having missed Israel's commemoration of
the event, but then the last desperate fight of the Jewish diaspora against the
Nazi beast doesn't accord with the Zionist view that the Diaspora is doomed
anyway. The
75th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Passed Unnoticed – It is not on
the Zionist Calendar
Poland, unlike
Hungary, was not an ally of Nazi Germany. It was either occupied or annexed
outright. There was no Polish Quisling. Up to 3 million Polish citizens died
under the Nazis. The Catholic Church in particular saw hundreds of its priests
murdered. Although the Polish middle classes were horrifically anti-Semitic the
working class and its party, the socialist PPS allied with the Jewish Bund.
Whereas Hungary was an
ally of Nazi Germany Poland was a victim. Israel's foremost poet Yitzhak Laor
put his finger on the problem when he asked
Why now. Why the
contemporary concern with the Jewish genocide… compared to its treatment in the
period immediately after the Second World War?’ [Yitzhak Laor, The Myths of Liberal Zionism, Verso, London, 2009,
p. 19].
His answer was that
this was about ‘consolidating a new ideology of exclusion. Now it is the
Jews who are the insiders… the genocide and the Jews served in the construction
of a European identity…’ [Laor, pp. 19,24, 35-6] Today it is the Muslims, the
Arabs and the Roma who are the outsiders in Europe.
The Holocaust has
become an integral part of the ideology of the identity of exclusion in Europe.
It no longer simply belongs to the Zionists. The Holocaust has been stripped of
its universal lessons, first by the Zionists and now by the Polish and
Hungarian rulers. Ideas such as that refugees should be welcomed and not turned
away, have been turned on its head by an ethnically exclusive Israeli state
with the silence if not support of YV. It is no wonder that this has been
absorbed by the anti-Semitic regimes of Europe. Daniel Blatman, who is a
sincere anti-racist will have his work cut out if he is to retain his
independence.
Yad Vashem is
now paying the price of the many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional,
simplistic message that there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust
Dec 18, 2018 11:44 AM
File photo: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, center, and his wife Aniko Levai visit the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, July 19, 2018. AP Photo/Oded Balilty
The Warsaw Ghetto Museum, which the Polish
government decided to establish eight months ago, is now at the center of a
debate.
This debate has political elements, but
it’s mainly a clash between two views of what should be stressed when
researching and remembering the Holocaust, and above all of what educational
messages should be sent – what Israelis like to call “the lessons of the
Holocaust.”
Haaretz’s Ofer Aderet, in his article about the Warsaw museum, mainly
discussed the political perspective, giving considerable space to the
criticisms by Prof. Hava Dreifuss, a YV historian. Dreifuss assailed the Warsaw
museum and those who decided, despite all the problems, to take on a project
whose importance is hard to overstate. This criticism deserves a response.
First, the political context. There’s no
more appropriate response to Dreifuss’ criticism than the old saying that
people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.
Dreifuss works for an institution that in
recent years has functioned as a hard-working laundromat, striving to bleach
out the sins of every anti-Semitic, fascist, racist or simply
murderously thuggish leader or politician like Hungary’s Viktor Orban, the
Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte and Italy’s Matteo Salvini.
My heart breaks when I see my colleagues,
honest and faithful researchers of the Holocaust, giving tours of this historic
museum, apparently under compulsion, to the evildoers the Israeli government
sends to YV to receive absolution in the name of Holocaust victims in exchange
for adding a pro-Israel vote at international institutions. For some reason,
Dreifuss has no criticism about this.
But for the Polish government (every
Polish government, both the current one headed by the nationalist Law and
Justice party and the previous one headed by a liberal centrist coalition),
which is spending tens of millions of zlotys every year to preserve historical
Jewish sites, Jewish graveyards and countless memorials, she has scathing criticism.
Fear and demoralization
A week and a half ago, Matti Friedman
published an opinion piece in The New York Times about
what’s happening at Yad Vashem, and it made for difficult reading. When you
read his conclusions, your hair stands on end. He doesn’t quote a single Yad
Vashem employee by name, because no one wanted to be identified. After all,
they have to earn a living.
Friedman described a mood of frustration,
fear and demoralization among the employees because the current extremist,
nationalist government has turned Yad Vashem into a political tool reminiscent
of history museums in totalitarian countries.
But the most astonishing thing Friedman
reported is that the institution’s chairman, Avner Shalev – who turned the
museum into an international remembrance empire, and who for years has
viciously fought every attempt to present a different conceptual or research
approach than that of Yad Vashem – is reluctant to retire, despite having
reached the age of 80.
The reason for his reluctance is that many
people at the institute fear that when he leaves, his place will be taken by
someone nominated by the relevant minister, Education Minister Naftali Bennett,
who will turn Yad Vashem into a remembrance institute in the spirit of
Bennett’s Habayit Hayehudi party. It would be interesting to know what Dreifuss
thinks about that.
Yad Vashem is now paying the price of the
many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional, simplistic message that
there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust. Today, the institution is
apparently willing to place its reputation for Holocaust research, which it has
built over many years, at the service of a government that has recruited it to
accuse anyone who criticizes Israel of anti-Semitism. So it’s no wonder that
its researchers have become partisan explainers of the Holocaust.
It’s one thing when, at dubious
conferences with political leaders whose governments include former neo-Nazis,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tries to pass resolutions calling criticism
of Israel the new anti-Semitism. It’s another when a research and remembrance
institute doesn’t stand courageously against all such attempts.
Thus Yad Vashem would do better not to
look for evidence that other governments are attempting to distort history and
dictate nationalist content – not to mention engaging in Holocaust denial, as
Dreifuss charges.
The Polish angle
Does any of the above justify the current
Polish government’s position on the Holocaust? Obviously not. The Polish
government has a problematic agenda in explaining the past, which we aren’t
obligated to accept and in fact should even criticize.
But Poland’s government hasn’t interfered
with the work of the museum’s employees, who have now started working, and
certainly not with the development of the museum’s narrative. Had Dreifuss and
her colleagues gotten involved in this effort, as they were invited to do, they
would have been welcomed. Had Yad Vashem offered its help and support instead
of giving the project the cold shoulder, nobody would have been happier than we
at the museum.
And now we come to the historical issue.
To take part in the effort to establish the Warsaw Ghetto Museum, one has to agree
that the Holocaust can be presented and explained from perspectives other than
an ethnocentric Jewish, Zionist and nationalist one.
One has to accept that the Holocaust can
be studied in a way that sees Jewish history during this period as an integral
part of Poland’s history under the Nazi occupation. One has to agree that the
horrific Jewish tragedy that occurred during World War II can and should be
understood in part by simultaneously examining – while noting both the
differences and the common elements – what befell Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners
of war and others who were murdered alongside Jews in the vast genocidal
expanse that occupied Poland became.
To set up a museum with a humanist,
universal and inclusive message about the Holocaust, one has to accept an
approach that sees the Warsaw Ghetto – a horrific terror zone that caused the
deaths and physical and spiritual collapse of hundreds of thousands of Jews –
as one element of a much bigger terror zone in which hundreds of thousands of
other people suffered and fought for their existence: the Poles who lived on
the other side of the wall.
The obvious differences between the fates
of these two peoples don’t absolve the research historian, or a museum
depicting the history of this period, from presenting this complex message and
demanding that visitors to the museum grapple with its lessons.
Therefore, the new Warsaw Ghetto Museum
won’t be Yad Vashem. It will be a Holocaust museum in the heart of the Polish
capital that remembers the fate of the 450,000 Jews, Warsaw residents and
refugees brought to the ghetto.
After all, the vast majority of them were
Jewish citizens of Poland. That’s how they lived, that’s how they suffered, and
that’s how they should be remembered after being murdered by the Nazis.
What
Happens When a Holocaust Memorial Plays Host to Autocrats
Yad Vashem is both a memorial of a genocide, and a tool of Israeli
realpolitik.
By Matti Friedman
New York Times, Dec. 8, 2018
JERUSALEM
— The quiet campus of Yad Vashem, Israel’s official Holocaust memorial and
museum, sits atop a wooded hill on the outskirts of Jerusalem, removed from the
rush of the city. It can feel like a secluded shrine, a place not quite of this
time. But the famous institution now finds itself at the center of a very
21st-century storm, a barometer of a political climate changing in the world
outside its walls.
Yad
Vashem, and the state that houses it, were founded by Jews forced from their
homes by chauvinistic nationalism and survivors of the European genocide that
was the logical conclusion of those ideas. The museum and Israel flourished in
years when those ideas were assumed to have been conclusively discredited.
Today,
however, some of those beliefs are rising once again across Europe and in the
United States, and Israel finds itself courted by some of their practitioners:
right-wing politicians who might stoke animosity to Jews and other minorities
at home but who also admire the state of Israel.
The
Israel they see is not a liberal or cosmopolitan enclave created by socialists,
but the nation-state of a coherent ethnic group suspicious of super-national
fantasies, a tough military power and a bulwark against the Islamic world. And
these leaders have sought and found good ties with the right-wing coalition currently
in power here.
For
a sense of this political shift, one need only look at the guest book at Yad
Vashem. The memorial is an important stop on the tour for visiting dignitaries,
and in the past half-year they have included the nationalist Hungarian prime
minister, Viktor Orban, one of the most prominent faces of the new political
wave, which Mr. Orban calls “illiberal democracy.” Another was President
Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines, who once compared himself to Hitler and
meant it as a compliment to Hitler and to himself. Brazil’s new populist
president, Jair Bolsonaro, has said one of his first foreign trips will be to
Israel, which means that Yad Vashem can expect him soon. Matteo Salvini, the
nationalist deputy prime minister of Italy, is expected in Jerusalem this
month.
Employees
at Yad Vashem aren’t allowed to speak to the media without permission, and
permission to discuss these sensitive matters hasn’t been forthcoming. One
senior researcher cut off our conversation as soon as I explained what
interested me. The institution’s chairman was not made available for an
interview and a spokeswoman simply emailed: “Yad Vashem is not party to the
formulation or implementation of Israeli’s foreign policy.”
But
inside the offices and archives at Yad Vashem, the argument is getting louder.
“There
is distress here, and even anger,” a staff
member told me, “because many of us see a collision between what we believe
are the lessons of the Holocaust and what we see as our job, and between the
way Yad Vashem is being abused for political purposes.”
Staffers
at Yad Vashem, which receives 40 percent of its budget from the government, are
asking themselves and each other questions like: What role should they be
playing in the realpolitik practiced by their state? At what point does that
role damage their other roles in commemorating and teaching the Holocaust? And
how should a memorial to the devastation wrought in part by ethnic supremacism,
a cult of personality and a disregard for law handle governments flirting with
the same ideas?
The
tension inside Yad Vashem broke into public view in June, in the part of the
memorial known as the Valley of the Communities, where stone walls commemorate
towns whose Jews were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators. The Austrian
chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, was passing the names of Austria’s lost communities
when his guide mentioned that some of these very places had recently seen
anti-Jewish incidents involving members of the Austrian Freedom Party. That
party, whose first two leaders were former S.S. officers, is a coalition
partner in Mr. Kurz’s own government.
Mr.
Kurz’s Yad Vashem guide, Deborah Hartmann, herself Austrian-born, said to the
chancellor that some of his allies were people who “need to be informed what
the Holocaust was.” After he left the site, the Austrian embassy reportedly
made a rare official complaint, saying Ms. Hartmann had strayed inappropriately
into politics. The incident was resolved with an apology from the museum
administration.
That
episode had barely subsided a month later, when a motorcade arrived carrying
Mr. Orban. The Hungarian’s visit drew vocal criticism not just from the Israeli
left but also from centrist politicians like Yair Lapid, who recalled Mr.
Orban’s praise last year for Miklos Horthy, the World War II leader who allied
Hungary with Nazi Germany and collaborated in the murder of the country’s Jews.
Mr. Lapid, the son of a Hungarian survivor and the grandson of a victim, said
the visit was a “disgrace.”
Before
Mr. Orban’s arrival, the administration of Yad Vashem saw fit to issue an
unusual reminder that it was the Foreign Ministry that decided the itinerary
for visiting officials. In other words: the memorial has no say over who comes.
The message suggested an awareness of the rebellious mood brewing in parts of
the institution. Mr. Orban’s visit to the memorial went off without incident,
though upon departure he was delayed by a group of protesters outside the
gates.
President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines,
who once likened himself to Hitler, and his daughter Sara at Yad Vashem in
September.CreditAbir Sultan/EPA, via
Shutterstock
Nearly
seven weeks later, on Sept. 3, came Mr. Duterte, who cultivates a thuggish
persona and, like other members of the current crop of populist leaders,
employs a style of outrageous rhetoric and verbal attacks on the press. Like
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, he sees President Trump as a “good
friend.” As this shift in global politics continues to play out, the
challenge to Yad Vashem will only grow.
“There’s
something going on in the world, and it seems very important,” a second
staff member told me. “Trump is part of it, and these leaders are part of it.”
The directives to steer clear of present-day politics, this staffer said, were not
just unrealistic but also dangerous, ignoring the ways Yad Vashem is used by
Mr. Netanyahu, in pursuit of his foreign policy, and by canny politicians from
the outside who grasp the value of a photo-op here.
Israel’s
first Holocaust researchers were people for whom the subject wasn’t academic,
such as Dr. Sarah Friedlander of Budapest, who’d just come out of the
concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen when she and a few others began Yad Vashem
in a three-room apartment in the center of Jerusalem right after the war.
In
1953, when Israel was five years old, Parliament enshrined Yad Vashem’s status
and funding in law. After a quarter-century under the stewardship of Avner
Shalev, a widely admired former paratroop officer, the sprawling campus now
includes numerous memorial sites, an immense archive and a heartbreaking museum
designed by the Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie, which draws about one
million visitors every year.
The
tension among Yad Vashem’s various roles is as old as the institution itself. “We
Jews cannot afford the luxury of mere research work — the awful danger has not
passed yet, as we have witnessed in recent years,” the scholar Aryeh
Tartakower told the first conference on Holocaust study in Jerusalem in 1947.
“It is quite possible — if only I were wrong — that these things could
return, and we have to know what to do in order to prepare for the terrible
days that are likely to come back.”
For
Israelis, Holocaust study has always meant reading the genocide as a warning —
and as a compass to direct our actions now.
The
problem with lessons from the Holocaust is that many can be drawn and they
often clash. An American liberal, for example, might say the lesson is
universal humanist values — the kind of values that many of us assumed, mistakenly,
were permanently ascendant in the world after the war. The Zionist approach has
traditionally been that while those values are desirable, they won’t protect
Jews after the Holocaust any more than they did when it was going on, and there
must be a state with enough power to protect Jews in a brutal world.
That
means alliances with other countries that have common interests, whatever their
attitude toward liberal values and even toward Jews. Israel signed a peace
agreement with the Egyptian leader Anwar el-Sadat, for example, even though
Sadat was an authoritarian who’d once been a supporter of Nazi Germany.
The
threat to Israel’s Jews in 2018 doesn’t come from rightists in the West but
from the Islamic world, and chiefly from the theocratic regime in Iran, which
has “Death to Israel” as one of its slogans and whose soldiers and proxies now
sit on three of Israel’s borders. Israelis might prefer liberal allies, but
liberal leaders in the West have generally been willing to do business with the
Iranians and to join dictatorships in isolating Israel at the United Nations.
Israel needs all the allies it can get, and leaders like Mr. Orban and Mr.
Trump, who share a suspicion of Israel’s enemies, are logical options.
The
political calculus is legitimate and one legitimate interpretation of what the
Holocaust teaches. The question is where this leaves Yad Vashem.
The
conundrum was best illustrated earlier this year in the imbroglio surrounding a law advanced by Poland’s
nationalist government to restrict accusations of Polish complicity in the
killing of Jews under Nazi occupation. Those most affected are Polish
historians, many of whom are colleagues and friends of the historians at Yad
Vashem. The same Polish government, however, has become an important ally of
Israel.
After
an uproar, the Poles watered down the law, and the Israeli and Polish
governments issued a joint statement on Poland’s
Holocaust history — a strange document of utilitarian historical revisionism
aimed at preserving an important alliance in the present.
Yad
Vashem’s chief historian, Dina Porat, said she could “live with” the
draft with some reservations. For this, she incurred the fury of the
institution’s other historians, who publicly excoriated the Israeli-Polish document for
inflating Polish efforts to save Jews, for suggesting a parallel between
anti-Semitism and “anti-Polonism” and for other instances of “highly
problematic wording that contradicts existing and accepted historical knowledge”
— or, in less diplomatic language, lies.
In
a similar episode, a new Hungarian Holocaust museum called the “House of Fates”
under construction by the Orban government has drawn sharp criticism from Yad
Vashem because it appears to play down the role of Hungarians in the genocide. Robert
Rozett, one of Yad Vashem’s historians said the project involves “a grave
falsification of history.” Dr. Rozett had been given the job of guiding Mr.
Orban on his visit earlier in the year.
Then,
just this week, Israel’s Channel 10 reported that senior Hungarian and Israeli
officials were meeting to come to a “consensus regarding the museum’s
narrative,” drawing accusations that the Netanyahu government was again
using Holocaust history, and Israel’s perceived role as an arbiter of that
history, as currency in the marketplace of international politics.
One
of the scholars behind Yad Vashem’s response to such matters is Yehuda Bauer,
the dean of Israeli Holocaust scholars. Mr. Bauer escaped Czechoslovakia as a
child with his family in 1939, and his sharp intelligence is undimmed at 92.
Yad
Vashem, he told me, has long done an admirable job of walking a tenuous
political line, remaining faithful to history while navigating the politics of
this country. While Mr. Bauer agreed that Yad Vashem is being used both by the
Israeli government and by visitors like Mr. Orban and Mr. Duterte, he said the
memorial had no choice: The Foreign Ministry sets the guest list, and the
memorial’s policy as an educational institution has always been that anyone who
wants to come can come. “It’s important to us to show them these things,
even if it’s people we wouldn’t invite to dinner,” he told me. When in the
1990s the possibility arose that Yasir Arafat of the Palestine Liberation
Organization might visit, he recalled, the memorial was in favor: “We said,
if he wants a guide, no problem, we have enough Arabic speakers.” (Mr.
Arafat never came.)
While
the welcoming of controversial leaders might draw criticism from the public or
unhappy staff members, refusing them or confronting them could draw the ire of
the Israeli government, which is a far greater concern for a practical reason
not necessarily apparent to outsiders. Yad Vashem’s chairman, Mr. Shalev, will
be 80 next year. The job is a political appointment. Mr. Shalev, put in place
under a Labor government in 1993, is understood to be a man of Israel’s old
moderate establishment. His replacement could bring the institution more
closely in line with Mr. Netanyahu’s political program. Insiders at Yad Vashem understand
that this is both a reason that Mr. Shalev isn’t retiring and a reason for
extreme caution in handling these current controversies and those sure to come.
The
idea of bringing dignitaries to pay respects at Yad Vashem is related to the
tradition in other countries of laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns —
an uncontroversial recognition of a piece of history important to the host
country. Yad Vashem might want to be a memorial of that kind, but it can’t be,
for the same reason its historians are constantly engaged in wars in the
present: because this history still isn’t in the past.
Matti Friedman, a
contributing opinion writer, is the author of the memoir “Pumpkinflowers: A
Soldier’s Story of a Forgotten War” and the forthcoming “Spies of No Country,”
about four Israeli agents in the 1948 war.
Warsaw's
Controversial New Holocaust Museum to Present 'Polish Narrative'
Critics say the
appointment of an Israeli, Daniel Blatman, as chief historian of the planned
Warsaw Ghetto Museum provides a fig leaf for an attempt to distort history
Ofer Aderet Dec
14, 2018 6:29 Prime Minister
In ordinary times, the appointment of an
Israeli historian to a top position abroad would be a source of pride in
Israeli academia. But in recent weeks, Prof. Daniel Blatman of Hebrew
University has had to deflect criticism for becoming the chief historian at the
Warsaw Ghetto Museum, which is being built in the Polish capital.
“Some of the critics are my colleagues
who once were my friends and maybe no longer are,” Blatman, a member of
Hebrew University’s Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry Department, said this
week.
The Warsaw Ghetto Museum is due to open in
2023, 80 years after the Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising. It will be housed in a building that served as a Jewish
children’s hospital and operated inside the ghetto.
Children in the Warsaw Ghetto
“It sounds very strange, but it will be
the first Polish museum dealing with the Holocaust, even though Poland has an
endless number of Polish commemoration sites,”
Blatman notes.
Privately, Blatman’s critics are hurling
accusations at him. In Polish, English and Hebrew they talk about his
appointment as serving as a fig leaf, or, using another metaphor, they say he
has sold his soul. The more moderate critics suffice with the view that he’s
simply naive and being used by the Polish government.
In recent years, critics have viewed with
concern the
right-wing government’s efforts to shape Poland’s national memory, an
effort centered around a new narrative that draws parallels between Polish and
Jewish suffering in World War II. It also exalts the role of Poles in saving
Jews and minimizes their responsibility in the persecution of Jews.
Prof. Daniel Blatman, a history professor at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Warsaw Ghetto Museum
Those critics, who were shocked this year
by Poland’s
new “Holocaust law” – which condemns the claim that the Polish nation was
involved in the Nazis’ crimes – are now worried that this government line will
also be reflected in Poland’s first Holocaust museum.
Tel Aviv University’s Hava Dreifuss, the
history professor who heads Yad Vashem’s
Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland, rebuffed the Polish museum’s
efforts to court her last summer.
“They requested my help as an expert on
the history of the Warsaw Ghetto,” she says. “I didn’t want my name to
serve an enterprise led by officials distorting the Holocaust and attacking
historians, and I didn’t want to help a museum being established to further
goals that aren’t necessarily related to history.”
Dreifuss, whose Hebrew-language book on
life in the ghetto, “Warsaw Ghetto – the End,” was published this
year, fears that the new museum will obscure events from the past that the
Poles would prefer to forget.
“The Polish government is trying to
advance research and commemoration of the Holocaust as long as it involves Jews
who were killed by the Germans,” she says. “But during the period of the
Holocaust there were also many Jews who were lost as a result of direct or
indirect Polish involvement. And an exploration of these matters is something
the regime is trying to limit, despite the existence of a great deal of
documentation and research.”
Jews at one of the walls of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II.
‘Mutual love’
Blatman says he has been granted full
academic freedom in his new post. “I haven’t encountered the slightest hint
of political involvement,” he says. “I wouldn’t have agreed to work as a
historian in a place where I’d be required to bend my professional approach to
political considerations.”
Polish Culture Minister Piotr Glinski
articulated the “spirit of the museum” at the beginning of this year. “I
would like this institution to speak of the mutual love between the two nations
that spent 800 years here, on Polish land. Of the solidarity, fraternity,
historical truth too, in all its aspects,” he told reporters.
Dreifuss doesn’t like this.
“From statements by the current Polish
government, one can infer that the new museum has aims beyond the presentation
of life in the ghetto and the treatment of the Holocaust of Polish Jewry,” she
says.
“The statement about strengthening 800
years of Jewish-Polish fraternity and closeness is fundamentally ahistorical.
The ghetto wasn’t in existence for 800 years, there wasn’t any Jewish-Polish
fraternity there, and there's a suspicion that the new museum will be
subordinated to just such a narrative.”
As she puts it,
“It must be remembered that the current
administration in Poland is promoting what is called a ‘historical policy,’ and
in that context it’s trying to shape a narrative different from what’s emerging
in the current research.”
Her qualms join those of other historians,
who note, for example, commemorations of Poles who saved Jews while endangering
or sacrificing their own lives. The most important of these is a
museum established in 2016 in the southeastern town of Markowa dedicated to
the Ulma family – Polish farmers who were killed by the Germans after they hid
Jews.
Children in the Warsaw Ghetto
“The museum at Markowa is devoted to an
important topic, Righteous Gentiles,” Dreifuss
says. “But actually it blurs the issue because it attributes to Polish
society as a whole the help that was given by these noble Poles, who acted in a
way that was counter to the social norms.”
The establishment of the World War II
Museum in Gdansk, which opened in 2017, also stirred controversy. At its
height, the director was fired and a new one was appointed “to give greater
emphasis to the Polish narrative.”
Blatman isn’t the first Israeli to take
part in a Polish commemoration project in the heart of Warsaw. He was preceded
by Israel Prize laureate Dani Karavan, who is currently at work on a monument
honoring the Polish Righteous Gentiles being built next to the POLIN Museum of
the History of Polish Jews. That museum was dedicated in 2013, marking the 70th
anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
There has been criticism of the site
chosen for the monument – the neighborhood where the ghetto stood. Critics say
the monument to Poles who rescued Jews shouldn’t be in a place where so many
Jews were killed.
Warsaw under the Nazis
When asked about the vision for the new
museum, Blatman presents a view that some historians find controversial. “The
Holocaust of Polish Jewry should be located in the Polish historical space, not
in an exclusively Jewish space,” he says.
The building in Warsaw
that will house the Warsaw Ghetto Museum.Adrian Grycuk
In other words, Blatman wants to tell the
story of the Warsaw Ghetto in the local context, including “the city of
Warsaw and the Polish population, which were under the same Nazi occupation and
were also subjected to the terror.”
He’s aware of the inflammatory potential
of the comparison between the sufferings of the two peoples during World War
II. “I’m not saying that their fate was similar or identical, but they lived
under the same occupation and not on some other planet,” Blatman says.
“We tend to forget a bit that the Jews in
the Warsaw Ghetto continued to see themselves as Polish citizens who belonged
to the place where they lived. Very often they were disappointed with Poland or
were hurt by the attitude of Polish society toward them, but they still were
Polish. Only after the war did we turn them solely into Jews.”
Albert Stankowski, a Polish Jew who
previously worked at the POLIN Museum in Warsaw, has been appointed director of
the new museum. “As I took the position of the Warsaw Ghetto Museum
director, I was granted complete autonomy in the recruitment of the museum
team,” he says. “We are open to cooperation with everyone who can assist
us in ensuring an objective presentation of the facts.”
When he began his new job, he tried to
recruit Polish historians to work at the new museum, but they declined. As
Dreifuss puts it:
“Precisely
in light of the Polish researchers’ refusal, it seems to me that the approach
to foreign historians isn’t a technical matter. As I see it, this was a way of
trying to acquire international approval, and perhaps even more importantly,
Jewish and Israeli approval for the museum and its narrative, at the expense of
the Polish researchers.”
Prof. Daniel Blatman, left, and Prof. Albert Stankowski at the
building that will house the Warsaw Ghetto Museum, 2018. Warsaw Ghetto Museum
Some of Blatman’s articles
for Haaretz show that he presents a complex picture of the Polish
government. He believes that in recent decades historical research has focused
on Polish aggressiveness toward Jews while ignoring the suffering of the Poles.
“The historical picture is not complete if
one tells about the killing of Jews by their Polish neighbors without also
mentioning, for example, the labor camps that were in operation in those same
areas, and in which many Poles found their deaths,” he
wrote in 2016. “The new museum,” he says now,
“will try to grapple with issues that have
been neglected in various exhibitions, both at Yad Vashem and in other
countries. We’re definitely thinking about incorporating a reminder about other
victims of the Nazi genocide.”
That said, Blatman’s articles also reveal
that he hasn’t gone easy on criticism of the Polish government in recent years;
he has often linked it to his harsh criticism of the Israeli government.
As
he wrote in April, what he calls National Zionism
“is a branch of European neo-fascism,
which contains elements of xenophobia and ultranationalism, subordinating
democracy to other values and restricting individual rights and the freedom and
independence of the law.”
This week, he disagreed that there was
something improper about taking a top position at a museum being established by
a Polish government that he has criticized so severely.
“Following that line, I also mustn’t
cooperate with Yad Vashem because it’s under the aegis of a minister whose
policy I’m very critical of,” he said,
referring to Education Minister Naftali Bennett.
‘South Africa became Israel's sole substantive
supporter on the continent and one of the few governments anywhere not calling
for her withdrawal from occupied Arab territory.’
John Vorster with Israeli Labour Govt. Ministers Yitzhak Rabin (right) and Moshe Dayan (with eyepatch) and Menachem Begin future Likud PM (left) |
South Africa and
Israel already had a strong commercial and military (including nuclear)
relationship. Israel and South Africa were ideological and political twins. As
the architect of Apartheid, Prime Minister Dr Hendrik Verwoerd observed
in 1961
‘The Jews took Israel from the
Arabs after the Arabs had lived there for a thousand years. Israel, like South Africa, is an apartheid state.’
By 1976, at a time
when most Western states were reducing their military relationship with South
Africa, Israel was strengthening theirs. In 1977 the voluntary UN arms embargo
on South Africa was made compulsory. This merely proved an incentive for Israel
to intensify its military relationship with South Africa and break the arms embargo.
This was done under an Israeli Labor Government. Brothers in arms - Israel's secret pact with
Pretoria
During the war Vorster
had been a General
in the para-military wing of the Ossewabrandwag, which conducted sabotage operations against the British war
effort. In 1942 Vorster was interned for his pro-Nazi
sympathies. None of this prevented Vorster from paying the obligatory
visit to Yad Vashem, [YV] Israel’s Holocaust memorial museum and laying a
wreath in memory of the victims of those whom he had supported.
The late Professor
Israel Shahak of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, who was a child survivor
of the Warsaw Ghetto and Belsen-Bergen concentration camp, wrote:
‘Of the Yad Vashem…
theatre, I do not wish to speak, at all. It, and its vile exploiting, such as
honouring South Africa collaborators with the Nazis are truly beneath contempt. [Kol Hair, 19 May 1998, Jerusalem].
YV is situated adjacent to the site of Deir Yassin, a village where
in April 1948 the Zionist terror groups Irgun and Lehi carried out a horrific massacre killing
up to 254 men, women and children. In 2009 YV fired a guide, Itamar Shapira, who
had dared to mention to visitors the proximity of YV to Deir Yassin.
Any independent or
reputable academic institute or museum connected with the Holocaust, both of
which YV purports to be, would have welcomed someone who drew parallels between
what happened to the Jews under the Nazis and other victims of racism and
fascism. If YV retained an ounce of independence or autonomy it would have
refused to welcome those who still cling to the ideas neo-Nazism and racial
supremacy.
However YV cannot do
that because it was set up as a specifically Zionist institute. It
depends for 40% of its income from a government which officially believes in
the segregation of Arabs and Jews and which has, within the past month, increased
the number of Jewish communities entitled to reject Arabs as members. It is
verboten therefore to draw any parallels between the treatment of Jews
under anti-Semitic regimes and that of non-Jews, especially the Palestinians, under
Israel’s racist regime.
YV’s
absurd position is that ‘the
Holocaust cannot be politicized or equated with any other event.’ as if the
Holocaust wasn’t itself a product of the political situation in Europe in the
last century. If the Holocaust is unique then there are no universal lessons
that can be drawn from it other than that Jews will always be the victims of
anti-Semitism whilst they live among non-Jews. Thwe uniqueness of the Holocaust
is very convenient because it means that growing Israeli fascism and Zionist
racism is immune from any historical study or comparison. It is a 'get out of
gaol free' card for Israel's treatment of the Palestinians. Itamar Shapira said
of YV that
"It
is being hypocritical. I only tried to expose the visitors to the facts, not to
political conclusions. If Yad Vashem chooses to ignore the facts, for example
the massacre at Dir Yassin, or the Nakba ["The Catastrophe," the
Palestinians' term for what happened to them after 1948], it means that it's
afraid of something and that its historic approach is flawed."
YV was established by
the Martyrs' and Heroes Remembrance (Yad Vashem) Law
5713-1953. In Israel the Holocaust is highly politicized. It is not a neutral academic subject but a propaganda weapon in
the hands of the State. It is the justification for Israel’s very existence and
also for every Israeli war crime. According to the myth of Israel’s victimhood,
every crisis it faces is an existentialist one, comparable to the Holocaust. Israel’s
enemies are always compared
to Hitler
and the Nazis.
Israel’s conflicts with the Palestinians are not those of a settler colonial
state stealing the land of the natives but a rerun of the Nazi destruction of
the Jews. As Israeli Professor Edit Zertal observed [Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood, p.100, CUP, 2011]:
‘The transference of the
Holocaust situation on to the Middle East reality… not only created a false
sense of the imminent danger of mass destruction. It also immensely distorted
the image of the Holocaust, dwarfed the magnitude of the atrocities committed
by the Nazis, trivializing the unique agony of the victims and the survivors,
and utterly demonizing the Arabs and their leaders.’
Zertal wrote that
there hasn’t been a war involving Israel ‘that has not been perceived,
defined, and conceptualized in terms of the Holocaust.’ Israel has
mobilised the Holocaust ‘in the service of Israeli politics.’ [pp. 4,
91]
Yet this is not about
the Holocaust but about the Zionist exploitation of the Holocaust. That
is why Israel’s concern for the sanctity and uniqueness of the Holocaust
contrasts with its shameful treatment of the Holocaust survivors who live in
Israel. When Holocaust survivors began arriving in Palestine after 1945 they
were treated with contempt and called 'sapon' (soap) after the myth that
the bodies of those the Nazis murdered had been turned into soap. [Tom Segev,
The Seventh Million, p.183]. Hanzi Brand wrote of how, when she settled on
Kibbutz Gvata Haim, the other members ‘talked
about their war to avoid hearing about hers. They were ashamed of the
Holocaust.’ [Segev p. 471]
Today, when the word
'anti-Semitism' is on the lips of every Zionist propagandist, it is forgotten
that when anti-Semitism was a dominant form of racism, Zionism was not
interested in opposing it. That is what distinguished Zionism from every other
Jewish political movement. Zionism began from the perspective that anti-Semitism
was impossible to fight. Antisemitism was held to be ingrained in non-Jews. In
the words of Zionism's founder, Theodor Herzl, it was 'futile'
to oppose anti-Semitism.
Although the Holocaust
is mercilessly exploited by Zionist propaganda today, when the Holocaust was happening
the Zionist leaders were indifferent to what was happening. Indeed they denied there
was a Holocaust. As Israeli historian, Yigal Elam wrote:
When the demonstrations and
protest actions against the Nazi regime of terror reached their climax, the
voice of Zionism was not to be heard. [Introduction to Zionist History, Tel
Aviv, 1972, pp. 113, 122]
Tom Segev, a
journalist and one of the new Israeli historians wrote in The Seventh
Million that the Zionist leadership of the Jewish Agency and Mapai, the
Israeli Labour Party
'instead of thinking of the
Holocaust in terms that would require effective and immediate action, exiled it
from real time into history. Thus the first press report of the murder of Jews
in mobile gas chambers was worded as though it were a story that happened long
ago:... With the Holocaust still raging, the leaders of the yishuv and opinion
makers indicted themselves for apathy and for their failure to rescue the
Jews.' (p.103)
Despite his role as an
apologist for all manner of Zionist atrocities, Ellie Wiesel, who survived
Auschwitz and the Hungarian Holocaust, praised Segev's book in a review in the
Los Angeles Times (The
Land that Broke its Promise, LA Times 23rd May 1993)
In October 2016 there
was one of these artificial Zionist furors when a Rabbi stated, at a meeting
chaired by Baroness Jenny Tonge, that the Holocaust was a punishment from God. This
was the purest hypocrisy. [Party
suspends UK baroness after meeting where Jews were blamed for Holocaust] On
27th November 1942 the Histadrut paper Davar
published an article 'describing the extermination of the Jews as
"punishment from heaven" for not having come to Palestine.' (Segev
p.98). Which is almost a mirror image of the
sermon by Pastor John Hagee of Christians United for Israel that Hitler was
an agent of God sent to drive the Jews to Palestine.
Untold millions of
shekels which Germany paid in reparations to Israel and the Zionist movement for
the benefit of the Holocaust survivors has been stolen by the Israeli state and
Zionist organisations such as the Jewish Claims Conference,
which has been the centre of repeated scandals. See Fraud
at the Jewish Claims Conference Spiegel online, 15.11.10. and Holocaust
Claims Conference Fraud Likely ‘Much Higher’ Than $57 Million Yardena
Schwartz describes
in The Tablet how a report by
Israel’s Welfare Minister Haim Katz in April 2016 revealed that 20,000
Holocaust survivors had been defrauded by the State of more than $30 million,
yet it was:
a
testament to how invisible survivors are in Israeli society, and how apathetic
the public is to their plight, Katz’s report made absolutely no waves in the
Israeli media. It should be news that Holocaust survivors are being left to die
in poverty, all while their legacy is used as a justification for the existence
of the nation that has so badly neglected them.
Since the end of
WWII, Germany has paid
more than $78.4 billion in reparations and compensation for survivors of Nazi
persecution. 40% of those funds, or about $31 billion, were allocated to
Holocaust victims in Israel. Yet rather than going solely to individual
Holocaust survivors, these funds have been primarily funneled through the
Israeli government and the Jewish Claims Conference, an agency founded in 1951.
According to the Holocaust Survivors Rights Authority, the Israeli governmental
agency entrusted with the issue of Holocaust survivors, there are about 200,000
Holocaust survivors living in Israel, nearly a third of whom live below the
poverty line.
This should be no
surprise. The Holocaust is not about what happened to the Jews of Europe and
the destruction of the Jewish communities of Europe, the actual victims, but
about the creation of a myth of the Holocaust and Jewish peoplehood. The Holocaust
has been used ideologically by Israeli and the West to justify racism against the
outsider - Muslims and others.
Italy's Matteo Salvini and his ideological |
How else can one
explain the fact that the Roma, who were also victims of the Holocaust, in
proportions similar to those of the Jews, are never mentioned? Matteo Salvini,
the Deputy Prime Minister of Italy and member of the far-Right Northern
Leagues, promised
to expel thousands of non-Italian Roma from Italy. This is the same Matteo
Salvini whom Netanyahu described as “a great friend of Israel.” at their meeting this
week. [Times
of Israel, 12.12.18.]
The
Zionist attitude to the Holocaust was summed up by Gerhard Riegner, World
Jewish Congress representative who was based in Switzerland during the War. It
was Riegner's
telegram, which was sent to London and Washington in August 1942, which confirmed
that the the deliberate extermination of European Jewry had begun in earnest.
The telegram was sat on by Rabbi Stephen Wise, leader of American Zionism, at
the request of the State Department until November 1942. In that 3 months
probably 1 million Jews were murdered. Riegner was of the opinion that '
Auschwitz was not only a
national memory belonging to the Jewish people that should not be taken by
anyone else; it was also an important political asset. Among other things it
served the diplomatic efforts of both the World Jewish Congress and Israel.' [Interview with Riegner,
Segev, p 474]
Below is an article
by Daniel Blatman, Professor in Holocaust Studies at the Hebrew University,
Jerusalem. Blatman has repeatedly warned that Israel is heading down the same
road that Germany and other European states took in the 1930’s. He wrote of Bezalel Smotrich, a Knesset member for Habayit HaYehudi
(Jewish Home), that:
Smotrich’s admiration for
the biblical genocidaire Joshua bin Nun leads him to adopt values that resemble
those of the German SS.
Blatman has himself
transgressed, a number of times the stipulations in the intellectually bankrupt
IHRA definition of anti-Semitism by comparing Israeli politics to those of Nazi
Germany, for example The
Rights and Wrongs of Comparing Israel to Nazi Germany
Blatman has been
appointed as the Chief Historian to the proposed Holocaust museum in Warsaw.
The Israeli Holocaust Establishment centred around YV are up in arms. Professor
Hava Dreifuss has raised the question of political interference from the Polish
government. Blatman retorted that people in glass houses should not throw stones. Blatman describes YV, for whom Dreifuss works
as a
hard-working laundromat,
striving to bleach out the sins of every anti-Semitic, fascist, racist or simply
murderously thuggish leader or politician like Hungary’s Viktor Orban, the
Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte and Italy’s Matteo Salvini.
YV has committed all
the sins that Dreifuss attributes to the putative Warsaw Ghetto museum. It has
hosted a whole swathe of far-Right leaders, some of whom like Viktor Orban have
dabbled in pro-Nazi politics. Orban, who paid a state visit to Israel in July
also visited YV. He was greeted by a demonstration
which included survivors of the Holocaust. Orban has gone on record as
describing Admiral Horthy, the war-time pro-Nazi ruler of Hungary, who oversaw
the deportation of 437,000 Jews to Auschwitz, as an ‘exceptional
statesman.'
There is a political
irony here because when Poland's far-Right Law and Justice Party passed a Holocaust law at
the end of January making it a criminal offence to say that Poles took part in
the Holocaust, Netanyahu rushed to reach an agreement with the Polish
Government. In exchange for dropping the penalty of imprisonment, the Israeli
state accepted the law despite vigorous condemnation even by Yehuda Bauer, the
Dean of Israel's holocaust historians. Bauer, who is an appalling apologist for
the role of Zionism during the Holocaust called the Israeli State's agreement
with the far-Right holocaust revisionists of the Polish Government a 'betrayal':
Bauer said that by signing the declaration,
Israel had betrayed Polish historians who had been persecuted by the Polish
government because they “tell the truth.”
He was referring to scholars such as Prof. Jan Tomasz Gross and Jan Grabowsky,
who have researched Polish involvement in the murder of Jews during the
Holocaust.
Yet who was it who
signed up to Netanyahu’s agreement? Dina
Porat, YV's Chief historian. This agreement was savaged by
YV's other historians thus demonstrating the disarray in YV today at
Netanyahu's courting of Europe's far-Right.
Daniel Blatman |
Blatman cites an
article in the New York Times by Matti Friedman describing the atmosphere among
workers at YV. [What Happens When a Holocaust Memorial Plays Host to
Autocrats] They are afraid that the Israeli government, in the form
of far-Right Education Minister Naftali Bennett, is about to impose a new
Director at YV in the place of the current 80 year old Avner Shalev .
Friedman described a
mood of frustration, fear and demoralization among the employees because the
current nationalist government has turned YV into a political tool reminiscent
of history museums in totalitarian countries.
In what is a
devastating critique of how YV has acted as a propaganda organisation, fine
tuning the Holocaust to Israel’s current political needs, Blatman writes that:
Yad Vashem is now paying
the price of the many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional, simplistic
message that there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust. Today, the
institution is apparently willing to place its reputation for Holocaust
research, which it has built over many years, at the service of a government
that has recruited it to accuse anyone who criticizes Israel of anti-Semitism. So
it’s no wonder that its researchers have become partisan explainers of the
Holocaust.
YV historians, from Yehuda Bauer down were
always politically partisan putting forward a view of the Holocaust that chimed
with Zionism’s political needs. For example they defended the Judenrat (Jewish
Councils) in the Nazi ghettos, two-thirds of whom were Zionists and criticised
Raul Hilberg, the most eminent of all Holocaust historians, for his assertion that
the Judenrate were an essential cog in the Nazi destruction process.
Likewise YV has all
but written out of its historical accounts the anti-Zionist and non-Zionist
contributions to resistance to Nazism, for example that of the Bund, who led
the Warsaw ghetto resistance. For years YV, under Yehuda Bauer, even erased the
very names of the two Jewish escapees from Auschwitz in April 1944, Rudolph
Vrba and Alfred Wexler. [See Ruth Linn, Escaping Auschwitz - A Culture of
Forgetting, 2004] The reason was that the leader of Hungarian Zionism, Rudolf
Kasztner, who was the subject of a 4 year trial in Israel (1954-58) for
collaboration, had suppressed the Auschwitz
Protocols that Vrba and Wexler wrote which told of the preparations the
Nazis were making to exterminate Europe's last major Jewish community. Vrba and
Wexler were not Zionists. See Hungary, Auschwitz and Rewriting the Holocaust
Not once have YV's
historians, from Bauer to Porat to Dreifuss
protested about visitors like Viktor Orban or Austrian Chancellor Kurz,
who is in a coalition government with the neo-Nazi Freedom Party. Or indeed
Philippines dictator Rodrigo Duterte who has openly compared himself to Hitler.
A Hitler Admirer at Yad Vashem
YV is, in essence,
complaining that Israel’s monopoly on the Holocaust is being broken. The
Holocaust has become part of the new Western political identity.
First a Holocaust
Museum was initiated by Jimmy Carter in Washington DC. Israel could hardly
object because the USA is Israel’s main benefactor. But now Hungary’s Orban and
Poland’s Law & Justice Government are establishing their own Holocaust
museums. Even worse they are not prepared to allow Israel to define their
message as they too wish to harness the Holocaust to their own nationalist
narrative. The Holocaust does not simply belong to Zionism and Israel but to
all sorts of reactionary regimes, all of whom Israel has close relationships
with.
It remains to be seen
how a Holocaust revisionist like Viktor Orban handles the Holocaust with his
new Museum, the House
of Fates. The dilemma is such that the Museum has had its brand new building
lying empty for three years whilst this dilemma is resolved.
What is clear is that
Poland is not willing to be dictated to by Israel. Although the Polish government
professes otherwise, the Holocaust is clearly being summoned in aid of a Polish
nationalist narrative, albeit one in which the Poles also suffered grievously under
the Nazis (up to 3 million Poles were murdered). Poland's government has hired
a dissident Israeli historian, Daniel Blatman, to be the chief historian of the
Museum of the History of Polish Jews. This has produced a furious reaction by YV's
historians and their Polish apologists. Why Is This Israeli Jewish Scholar a
Willing Poster Boy for Poland's Brutal Distortion of the Holocaust?
The problem that faces
the Museum is that Poland before WW2 was a byword for anti-Semitism. In the
universities there were ghetto benches for Jewish students. Pogroms led by the
Endeks (National
Democratic Party) and the National Radical
Camp were a regular occurrence. E.g. Poland
Does Nothing to Check Anti-semitic Drive of the Endeks, Jewish Telegraph
Agency, JTA 7.8.1934.
It was in this
situation that Zionism, which had a mass base in the 1920's declined as the
Bund, an anti-Zionist Jewish party came to the fore. It was the Bund who led
the Warsaw Ghetto Resistance despite the best efforts of Israel and YV to erase
the Bund from history. In the last free elections in Poland in 1938, the Bund won
17 out of the 20 Jewish council seats in Warsaw compared to just one for the Zionists.
The last Commander of
the Jewish Resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto, Marek
Edelman died a non-person in Israel. He received a 15 gun state funeral in
Poland but not one Israeli government representative, not even the lowliest
clerk at the Israeli Embassy attended. Zionism
Boycotts the Funeral of Marek Edelman This year was the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto
Resistance. You would be forgiven for having missed Israel's commemoration of
the event, but then the last desperate fight of the Jewish diaspora against the
Nazi beast doesn't accord with the Zionist view that the Diaspora is doomed
anyway. The
75th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Passed Unnoticed – It is not on
the Zionist Calendar
Poland, unlike
Hungary, was not an ally of Nazi Germany. It was either occupied or annexed
outright. There was no Polish Quisling. Up to 3 million Polish citizens died
under the Nazis. The Catholic Church in particular saw hundreds of its priests
murdered. Although the Polish middle classes were horrifically anti-Semitic the
working class and its party, the socialist PPS allied with the Jewish Bund.
Whereas Hungary was an
ally of Nazi Germany Poland was a victim. Israel's foremost poet Yitzhak Laor
put his finger on the problem when he asked
Why now. Why the
contemporary concern with the Jewish genocide… compared to its treatment in the
period immediately after the Second World War?’ [Yitzhak Laor, The Myths of Liberal Zionism, Verso, London, 2009,
p. 19].
His answer was that
this was about ‘consolidating a new ideology of exclusion. Now it is the
Jews who are the insiders… the genocide and the Jews served in the construction
of a European identity…’ [Laor, pp. 19,24, 35-6] Today it is the Muslims, the
Arabs and the Roma who are the outsiders in Europe.
The Holocaust has
become an integral part of the ideology of the identity of exclusion in Europe.
It no longer simply belongs to the Zionists. The Holocaust has been stripped of
its universal lessons, first by the Zionists and now by the Polish and
Hungarian rulers. Ideas such as that refugees should be welcomed and not turned
away, have been turned on its head by an ethnically exclusive Israeli state
with the silence if not support of YV. It is no wonder that this has been
absorbed by the anti-Semitic regimes of Europe. Daniel Blatman, who is a
sincere anti-racist will have his work cut out if he is to retain his
independence.
Yad Vashem is
now paying the price of the many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional,
simplistic message that there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust
Dec 18, 2018 11:44 AM
File photo: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, center, and his wife Aniko Levai visit the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, July 19, 2018. AP Photo/Oded Balilty |
The Warsaw Ghetto Museum, which the Polish
government decided to establish eight months ago, is now at the center of a
debate.
This debate has political elements, but
it’s mainly a clash between two views of what should be stressed when
researching and remembering the Holocaust, and above all of what educational
messages should be sent – what Israelis like to call “the lessons of the
Holocaust.”
Haaretz’s Ofer Aderet, in his article about the Warsaw museum, mainly
discussed the political perspective, giving considerable space to the
criticisms by Prof. Hava Dreifuss, a YV historian. Dreifuss assailed the Warsaw
museum and those who decided, despite all the problems, to take on a project
whose importance is hard to overstate. This criticism deserves a response.
First, the political context. There’s no
more appropriate response to Dreifuss’ criticism than the old saying that
people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.
Dreifuss works for an institution that in
recent years has functioned as a hard-working laundromat, striving to bleach
out the sins of every anti-Semitic, fascist, racist or simply
murderously thuggish leader or politician like Hungary’s Viktor Orban, the
Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte and Italy’s Matteo Salvini.
My heart breaks when I see my colleagues,
honest and faithful researchers of the Holocaust, giving tours of this historic
museum, apparently under compulsion, to the evildoers the Israeli government
sends to YV to receive absolution in the name of Holocaust victims in exchange
for adding a pro-Israel vote at international institutions. For some reason,
Dreifuss has no criticism about this.
But for the Polish government (every
Polish government, both the current one headed by the nationalist Law and
Justice party and the previous one headed by a liberal centrist coalition),
which is spending tens of millions of zlotys every year to preserve historical
Jewish sites, Jewish graveyards and countless memorials, she has scathing criticism.
Fear and demoralization
A week and a half ago, Matti Friedman
published an opinion piece in The New York Times about
what’s happening at Yad Vashem, and it made for difficult reading. When you
read his conclusions, your hair stands on end. He doesn’t quote a single Yad
Vashem employee by name, because no one wanted to be identified. After all,
they have to earn a living.
Friedman described a mood of frustration,
fear and demoralization among the employees because the current extremist,
nationalist government has turned Yad Vashem into a political tool reminiscent
of history museums in totalitarian countries.
But the most astonishing thing Friedman
reported is that the institution’s chairman, Avner Shalev – who turned the
museum into an international remembrance empire, and who for years has
viciously fought every attempt to present a different conceptual or research
approach than that of Yad Vashem – is reluctant to retire, despite having
reached the age of 80.
The reason for his reluctance is that many
people at the institute fear that when he leaves, his place will be taken by
someone nominated by the relevant minister, Education Minister Naftali Bennett,
who will turn Yad Vashem into a remembrance institute in the spirit of
Bennett’s Habayit Hayehudi party. It would be interesting to know what Dreifuss
thinks about that.
Yad Vashem is now paying the price of the
many years in which it nurtured a one-dimensional, simplistic message that
there’s only one way to explain the Holocaust. Today, the institution is
apparently willing to place its reputation for Holocaust research, which it has
built over many years, at the service of a government that has recruited it to
accuse anyone who criticizes Israel of anti-Semitism. So it’s no wonder that
its researchers have become partisan explainers of the Holocaust.
It’s one thing when, at dubious
conferences with political leaders whose governments include former neo-Nazis,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tries to pass resolutions calling criticism
of Israel the new anti-Semitism. It’s another when a research and remembrance
institute doesn’t stand courageously against all such attempts.
Thus Yad Vashem would do better not to
look for evidence that other governments are attempting to distort history and
dictate nationalist content – not to mention engaging in Holocaust denial, as
Dreifuss charges.
The Polish angle
Does any of the above justify the current
Polish government’s position on the Holocaust? Obviously not. The Polish
government has a problematic agenda in explaining the past, which we aren’t
obligated to accept and in fact should even criticize.
But Poland’s government hasn’t interfered
with the work of the museum’s employees, who have now started working, and
certainly not with the development of the museum’s narrative. Had Dreifuss and
her colleagues gotten involved in this effort, as they were invited to do, they
would have been welcomed. Had Yad Vashem offered its help and support instead
of giving the project the cold shoulder, nobody would have been happier than we
at the museum.
And now we come to the historical issue.
To take part in the effort to establish the Warsaw Ghetto Museum, one has to agree
that the Holocaust can be presented and explained from perspectives other than
an ethnocentric Jewish, Zionist and nationalist one.
One has to accept that the Holocaust can
be studied in a way that sees Jewish history during this period as an integral
part of Poland’s history under the Nazi occupation. One has to agree that the
horrific Jewish tragedy that occurred during World War II can and should be
understood in part by simultaneously examining – while noting both the
differences and the common elements – what befell Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners
of war and others who were murdered alongside Jews in the vast genocidal
expanse that occupied Poland became.
To set up a museum with a humanist,
universal and inclusive message about the Holocaust, one has to accept an
approach that sees the Warsaw Ghetto – a horrific terror zone that caused the
deaths and physical and spiritual collapse of hundreds of thousands of Jews –
as one element of a much bigger terror zone in which hundreds of thousands of
other people suffered and fought for their existence: the Poles who lived on
the other side of the wall.
The obvious differences between the fates
of these two peoples don’t absolve the research historian, or a museum
depicting the history of this period, from presenting this complex message and
demanding that visitors to the museum grapple with its lessons.
Therefore, the new Warsaw Ghetto Museum
won’t be Yad Vashem. It will be a Holocaust museum in the heart of the Polish
capital that remembers the fate of the 450,000 Jews, Warsaw residents and
refugees brought to the ghetto.
After all, the vast majority of them were
Jewish citizens of Poland. That’s how they lived, that’s how they suffered, and
that’s how they should be remembered after being murdered by the Nazis.
What
Happens When a Holocaust Memorial Plays Host to Autocrats
Yad Vashem is both a memorial of a genocide, and a tool of Israeli
realpolitik.
By Matti Friedman
New York Times, Dec. 8, 2018
JERUSALEM
— The quiet campus of Yad Vashem, Israel’s official Holocaust memorial and
museum, sits atop a wooded hill on the outskirts of Jerusalem, removed from the
rush of the city. It can feel like a secluded shrine, a place not quite of this
time. But the famous institution now finds itself at the center of a very
21st-century storm, a barometer of a political climate changing in the world
outside its walls.
Yad
Vashem, and the state that houses it, were founded by Jews forced from their
homes by chauvinistic nationalism and survivors of the European genocide that
was the logical conclusion of those ideas. The museum and Israel flourished in
years when those ideas were assumed to have been conclusively discredited.
Today,
however, some of those beliefs are rising once again across Europe and in the
United States, and Israel finds itself courted by some of their practitioners:
right-wing politicians who might stoke animosity to Jews and other minorities
at home but who also admire the state of Israel.
The
Israel they see is not a liberal or cosmopolitan enclave created by socialists,
but the nation-state of a coherent ethnic group suspicious of super-national
fantasies, a tough military power and a bulwark against the Islamic world. And
these leaders have sought and found good ties with the right-wing coalition currently
in power here.
For
a sense of this political shift, one need only look at the guest book at Yad
Vashem. The memorial is an important stop on the tour for visiting dignitaries,
and in the past half-year they have included the nationalist Hungarian prime
minister, Viktor Orban, one of the most prominent faces of the new political
wave, which Mr. Orban calls “illiberal democracy.” Another was President
Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines, who once compared himself to Hitler and
meant it as a compliment to Hitler and to himself. Brazil’s new populist
president, Jair Bolsonaro, has said one of his first foreign trips will be to
Israel, which means that Yad Vashem can expect him soon. Matteo Salvini, the
nationalist deputy prime minister of Italy, is expected in Jerusalem this
month.
Employees
at Yad Vashem aren’t allowed to speak to the media without permission, and
permission to discuss these sensitive matters hasn’t been forthcoming. One
senior researcher cut off our conversation as soon as I explained what
interested me. The institution’s chairman was not made available for an
interview and a spokeswoman simply emailed: “Yad Vashem is not party to the
formulation or implementation of Israeli’s foreign policy.”
But
inside the offices and archives at Yad Vashem, the argument is getting louder.
“There
is distress here, and even anger,” a staff
member told me, “because many of us see a collision between what we believe
are the lessons of the Holocaust and what we see as our job, and between the
way Yad Vashem is being abused for political purposes.”
Staffers
at Yad Vashem, which receives 40 percent of its budget from the government, are
asking themselves and each other questions like: What role should they be
playing in the realpolitik practiced by their state? At what point does that
role damage their other roles in commemorating and teaching the Holocaust? And
how should a memorial to the devastation wrought in part by ethnic supremacism,
a cult of personality and a disregard for law handle governments flirting with
the same ideas?
The
tension inside Yad Vashem broke into public view in June, in the part of the
memorial known as the Valley of the Communities, where stone walls commemorate
towns whose Jews were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators. The Austrian
chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, was passing the names of Austria’s lost communities
when his guide mentioned that some of these very places had recently seen
anti-Jewish incidents involving members of the Austrian Freedom Party. That
party, whose first two leaders were former S.S. officers, is a coalition
partner in Mr. Kurz’s own government.
Mr.
Kurz’s Yad Vashem guide, Deborah Hartmann, herself Austrian-born, said to the
chancellor that some of his allies were people who “need to be informed what
the Holocaust was.” After he left the site, the Austrian embassy reportedly
made a rare official complaint, saying Ms. Hartmann had strayed inappropriately
into politics. The incident was resolved with an apology from the museum
administration.
That
episode had barely subsided a month later, when a motorcade arrived carrying
Mr. Orban. The Hungarian’s visit drew vocal criticism not just from the Israeli
left but also from centrist politicians like Yair Lapid, who recalled Mr.
Orban’s praise last year for Miklos Horthy, the World War II leader who allied
Hungary with Nazi Germany and collaborated in the murder of the country’s Jews.
Mr. Lapid, the son of a Hungarian survivor and the grandson of a victim, said
the visit was a “disgrace.”
Before
Mr. Orban’s arrival, the administration of Yad Vashem saw fit to issue an
unusual reminder that it was the Foreign Ministry that decided the itinerary
for visiting officials. In other words: the memorial has no say over who comes.
The message suggested an awareness of the rebellious mood brewing in parts of
the institution. Mr. Orban’s visit to the memorial went off without incident,
though upon departure he was delayed by a group of protesters outside the
gates.
President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines,
who once likened himself to Hitler, and his daughter Sara at Yad Vashem in
September.CreditAbir Sultan/EPA, via
Shutterstock
Nearly
seven weeks later, on Sept. 3, came Mr. Duterte, who cultivates a thuggish
persona and, like other members of the current crop of populist leaders,
employs a style of outrageous rhetoric and verbal attacks on the press. Like
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, he sees President Trump as a “good
friend.” As this shift in global politics continues to play out, the
challenge to Yad Vashem will only grow.
“There’s
something going on in the world, and it seems very important,” a second
staff member told me. “Trump is part of it, and these leaders are part of it.”
The directives to steer clear of present-day politics, this staffer said, were not
just unrealistic but also dangerous, ignoring the ways Yad Vashem is used by
Mr. Netanyahu, in pursuit of his foreign policy, and by canny politicians from
the outside who grasp the value of a photo-op here.
Israel’s
first Holocaust researchers were people for whom the subject wasn’t academic,
such as Dr. Sarah Friedlander of Budapest, who’d just come out of the
concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen when she and a few others began Yad Vashem
in a three-room apartment in the center of Jerusalem right after the war.
In
1953, when Israel was five years old, Parliament enshrined Yad Vashem’s status
and funding in law. After a quarter-century under the stewardship of Avner
Shalev, a widely admired former paratroop officer, the sprawling campus now
includes numerous memorial sites, an immense archive and a heartbreaking museum
designed by the Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie, which draws about one
million visitors every year.
The
tension among Yad Vashem’s various roles is as old as the institution itself. “We
Jews cannot afford the luxury of mere research work — the awful danger has not
passed yet, as we have witnessed in recent years,” the scholar Aryeh
Tartakower told the first conference on Holocaust study in Jerusalem in 1947.
“It is quite possible — if only I were wrong — that these things could
return, and we have to know what to do in order to prepare for the terrible
days that are likely to come back.”
For
Israelis, Holocaust study has always meant reading the genocide as a warning —
and as a compass to direct our actions now.
The
problem with lessons from the Holocaust is that many can be drawn and they
often clash. An American liberal, for example, might say the lesson is
universal humanist values — the kind of values that many of us assumed, mistakenly,
were permanently ascendant in the world after the war. The Zionist approach has
traditionally been that while those values are desirable, they won’t protect
Jews after the Holocaust any more than they did when it was going on, and there
must be a state with enough power to protect Jews in a brutal world.
That
means alliances with other countries that have common interests, whatever their
attitude toward liberal values and even toward Jews. Israel signed a peace
agreement with the Egyptian leader Anwar el-Sadat, for example, even though
Sadat was an authoritarian who’d once been a supporter of Nazi Germany.
The
threat to Israel’s Jews in 2018 doesn’t come from rightists in the West but
from the Islamic world, and chiefly from the theocratic regime in Iran, which
has “Death to Israel” as one of its slogans and whose soldiers and proxies now
sit on three of Israel’s borders. Israelis might prefer liberal allies, but
liberal leaders in the West have generally been willing to do business with the
Iranians and to join dictatorships in isolating Israel at the United Nations.
Israel needs all the allies it can get, and leaders like Mr. Orban and Mr.
Trump, who share a suspicion of Israel’s enemies, are logical options.
The
political calculus is legitimate and one legitimate interpretation of what the
Holocaust teaches. The question is where this leaves Yad Vashem.
The
conundrum was best illustrated earlier this year in the imbroglio surrounding a law advanced by Poland’s
nationalist government to restrict accusations of Polish complicity in the
killing of Jews under Nazi occupation. Those most affected are Polish
historians, many of whom are colleagues and friends of the historians at Yad
Vashem. The same Polish government, however, has become an important ally of
Israel.
After
an uproar, the Poles watered down the law, and the Israeli and Polish
governments issued a joint statement on Poland’s
Holocaust history — a strange document of utilitarian historical revisionism
aimed at preserving an important alliance in the present.
Yad
Vashem’s chief historian, Dina Porat, said she could “live with” the
draft with some reservations. For this, she incurred the fury of the
institution’s other historians, who publicly excoriated the Israeli-Polish document for
inflating Polish efforts to save Jews, for suggesting a parallel between
anti-Semitism and “anti-Polonism” and for other instances of “highly
problematic wording that contradicts existing and accepted historical knowledge”
— or, in less diplomatic language, lies.
In
a similar episode, a new Hungarian Holocaust museum called the “House of Fates”
under construction by the Orban government has drawn sharp criticism from Yad
Vashem because it appears to play down the role of Hungarians in the genocide. Robert
Rozett, one of Yad Vashem’s historians said the project involves “a grave
falsification of history.” Dr. Rozett had been given the job of guiding Mr.
Orban on his visit earlier in the year.
Then,
just this week, Israel’s Channel 10 reported that senior Hungarian and Israeli
officials were meeting to come to a “consensus regarding the museum’s
narrative,” drawing accusations that the Netanyahu government was again
using Holocaust history, and Israel’s perceived role as an arbiter of that
history, as currency in the marketplace of international politics.
One
of the scholars behind Yad Vashem’s response to such matters is Yehuda Bauer,
the dean of Israeli Holocaust scholars. Mr. Bauer escaped Czechoslovakia as a
child with his family in 1939, and his sharp intelligence is undimmed at 92.
Yad
Vashem, he told me, has long done an admirable job of walking a tenuous
political line, remaining faithful to history while navigating the politics of
this country. While Mr. Bauer agreed that Yad Vashem is being used both by the
Israeli government and by visitors like Mr. Orban and Mr. Duterte, he said the
memorial had no choice: The Foreign Ministry sets the guest list, and the
memorial’s policy as an educational institution has always been that anyone who
wants to come can come. “It’s important to us to show them these things,
even if it’s people we wouldn’t invite to dinner,” he told me. When in the
1990s the possibility arose that Yasir Arafat of the Palestine Liberation
Organization might visit, he recalled, the memorial was in favor: “We said,
if he wants a guide, no problem, we have enough Arabic speakers.” (Mr.
Arafat never came.)
While
the welcoming of controversial leaders might draw criticism from the public or
unhappy staff members, refusing them or confronting them could draw the ire of
the Israeli government, which is a far greater concern for a practical reason
not necessarily apparent to outsiders. Yad Vashem’s chairman, Mr. Shalev, will
be 80 next year. The job is a political appointment. Mr. Shalev, put in place
under a Labor government in 1993, is understood to be a man of Israel’s old
moderate establishment. His replacement could bring the institution more
closely in line with Mr. Netanyahu’s political program. Insiders at Yad Vashem understand
that this is both a reason that Mr. Shalev isn’t retiring and a reason for
extreme caution in handling these current controversies and those sure to come.
The
idea of bringing dignitaries to pay respects at Yad Vashem is related to the
tradition in other countries of laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns —
an uncontroversial recognition of a piece of history important to the host
country. Yad Vashem might want to be a memorial of that kind, but it can’t be,
for the same reason its historians are constantly engaged in wars in the
present: because this history still isn’t in the past.
Matti Friedman, a
contributing opinion writer, is the author of the memoir “Pumpkinflowers: A
Soldier’s Story of a Forgotten War” and the forthcoming “Spies of No Country,”
about four Israeli agents in the 1948 war.
Warsaw's
Controversial New Holocaust Museum to Present 'Polish Narrative'
Critics say the
appointment of an Israeli, Daniel Blatman, as chief historian of the planned
Warsaw Ghetto Museum provides a fig leaf for an attempt to distort history
Ofer Aderet Dec
14, 2018 6:29 Prime Minister
In ordinary times, the appointment of an
Israeli historian to a top position abroad would be a source of pride in
Israeli academia. But in recent weeks, Prof. Daniel Blatman of Hebrew
University has had to deflect criticism for becoming the chief historian at the
Warsaw Ghetto Museum, which is being built in the Polish capital.
“Some of the critics are my colleagues
who once were my friends and maybe no longer are,” Blatman, a member of
Hebrew University’s Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry Department, said this
week.
The Warsaw Ghetto Museum is due to open in
2023, 80 years after the Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising. It will be housed in a building that served as a Jewish
children’s hospital and operated inside the ghetto.
Children in the Warsaw Ghetto |
“It sounds very strange, but it will be
the first Polish museum dealing with the Holocaust, even though Poland has an
endless number of Polish commemoration sites,”
Blatman notes.
Privately, Blatman’s critics are hurling
accusations at him. In Polish, English and Hebrew they talk about his
appointment as serving as a fig leaf, or, using another metaphor, they say he
has sold his soul. The more moderate critics suffice with the view that he’s
simply naive and being used by the Polish government.
In recent years, critics have viewed with
concern the
right-wing government’s efforts to shape Poland’s national memory, an
effort centered around a new narrative that draws parallels between Polish and
Jewish suffering in World War II. It also exalts the role of Poles in saving
Jews and minimizes their responsibility in the persecution of Jews.
Prof. Daniel Blatman, a history professor at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Warsaw Ghetto Museum
Those critics, who were shocked this year
by Poland’s
new “Holocaust law” – which condemns the claim that the Polish nation was
involved in the Nazis’ crimes – are now worried that this government line will
also be reflected in Poland’s first Holocaust museum.
Tel Aviv University’s Hava Dreifuss, the
history professor who heads Yad Vashem’s
Center for Research on the Holocaust in Poland, rebuffed the Polish museum’s
efforts to court her last summer.
“They requested my help as an expert on
the history of the Warsaw Ghetto,” she says. “I didn’t want my name to
serve an enterprise led by officials distorting the Holocaust and attacking
historians, and I didn’t want to help a museum being established to further
goals that aren’t necessarily related to history.”
Dreifuss, whose Hebrew-language book on
life in the ghetto, “Warsaw Ghetto – the End,” was published this
year, fears that the new museum will obscure events from the past that the
Poles would prefer to forget.
“The Polish government is trying to
advance research and commemoration of the Holocaust as long as it involves Jews
who were killed by the Germans,” she says. “But during the period of the
Holocaust there were also many Jews who were lost as a result of direct or
indirect Polish involvement. And an exploration of these matters is something
the regime is trying to limit, despite the existence of a great deal of
documentation and research.”
Jews at one of the walls of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II. |
‘Mutual love’
Blatman says he has been granted full
academic freedom in his new post. “I haven’t encountered the slightest hint
of political involvement,” he says. “I wouldn’t have agreed to work as a
historian in a place where I’d be required to bend my professional approach to
political considerations.”
Polish Culture Minister Piotr Glinski
articulated the “spirit of the museum” at the beginning of this year. “I
would like this institution to speak of the mutual love between the two nations
that spent 800 years here, on Polish land. Of the solidarity, fraternity,
historical truth too, in all its aspects,” he told reporters.
Dreifuss doesn’t like this.
“From statements by the current Polish
government, one can infer that the new museum has aims beyond the presentation
of life in the ghetto and the treatment of the Holocaust of Polish Jewry,” she
says.
“The statement about strengthening 800
years of Jewish-Polish fraternity and closeness is fundamentally ahistorical.
The ghetto wasn’t in existence for 800 years, there wasn’t any Jewish-Polish
fraternity there, and there's a suspicion that the new museum will be
subordinated to just such a narrative.”
As she puts it,
“It must be remembered that the current
administration in Poland is promoting what is called a ‘historical policy,’ and
in that context it’s trying to shape a narrative different from what’s emerging
in the current research.”
Her qualms join those of other historians,
who note, for example, commemorations of Poles who saved Jews while endangering
or sacrificing their own lives. The most important of these is a
museum established in 2016 in the southeastern town of Markowa dedicated to
the Ulma family – Polish farmers who were killed by the Germans after they hid
Jews.
Children in the Warsaw Ghetto |
“The museum at Markowa is devoted to an
important topic, Righteous Gentiles,” Dreifuss
says. “But actually it blurs the issue because it attributes to Polish
society as a whole the help that was given by these noble Poles, who acted in a
way that was counter to the social norms.”
The establishment of the World War II
Museum in Gdansk, which opened in 2017, also stirred controversy. At its
height, the director was fired and a new one was appointed “to give greater
emphasis to the Polish narrative.”
Blatman isn’t the first Israeli to take
part in a Polish commemoration project in the heart of Warsaw. He was preceded
by Israel Prize laureate Dani Karavan, who is currently at work on a monument
honoring the Polish Righteous Gentiles being built next to the POLIN Museum of
the History of Polish Jews. That museum was dedicated in 2013, marking the 70th
anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
There has been criticism of the site
chosen for the monument – the neighborhood where the ghetto stood. Critics say
the monument to Poles who rescued Jews shouldn’t be in a place where so many
Jews were killed.
Warsaw under the Nazis
When asked about the vision for the new
museum, Blatman presents a view that some historians find controversial. “The
Holocaust of Polish Jewry should be located in the Polish historical space, not
in an exclusively Jewish space,” he says.
The building in Warsaw
that will house the Warsaw Ghetto Museum.Adrian Grycuk
In other words, Blatman wants to tell the
story of the Warsaw Ghetto in the local context, including “the city of
Warsaw and the Polish population, which were under the same Nazi occupation and
were also subjected to the terror.”
He’s aware of the inflammatory potential
of the comparison between the sufferings of the two peoples during World War
II. “I’m not saying that their fate was similar or identical, but they lived
under the same occupation and not on some other planet,” Blatman says.
“We tend to forget a bit that the Jews in
the Warsaw Ghetto continued to see themselves as Polish citizens who belonged
to the place where they lived. Very often they were disappointed with Poland or
were hurt by the attitude of Polish society toward them, but they still were
Polish. Only after the war did we turn them solely into Jews.”
Albert Stankowski, a Polish Jew who
previously worked at the POLIN Museum in Warsaw, has been appointed director of
the new museum. “As I took the position of the Warsaw Ghetto Museum
director, I was granted complete autonomy in the recruitment of the museum
team,” he says. “We are open to cooperation with everyone who can assist
us in ensuring an objective presentation of the facts.”
When he began his new job, he tried to
recruit Polish historians to work at the new museum, but they declined. As
Dreifuss puts it:
“Precisely
in light of the Polish researchers’ refusal, it seems to me that the approach
to foreign historians isn’t a technical matter. As I see it, this was a way of
trying to acquire international approval, and perhaps even more importantly,
Jewish and Israeli approval for the museum and its narrative, at the expense of
the Polish researchers.”
Prof. Daniel Blatman, left, and Prof. Albert Stankowski at the
building that will house the Warsaw Ghetto Museum, 2018. Warsaw Ghetto Museum
Some of Blatman’s articles
for Haaretz show that he presents a complex picture of the Polish
government. He believes that in recent decades historical research has focused
on Polish aggressiveness toward Jews while ignoring the suffering of the Poles.
“The historical picture is not complete if
one tells about the killing of Jews by their Polish neighbors without also
mentioning, for example, the labor camps that were in operation in those same
areas, and in which many Poles found their deaths,” he
wrote in 2016. “The new museum,” he says now,
“will try to grapple with issues that have
been neglected in various exhibitions, both at Yad Vashem and in other
countries. We’re definitely thinking about incorporating a reminder about other
victims of the Nazi genocide.”
That said, Blatman’s articles also reveal
that he hasn’t gone easy on criticism of the Polish government in recent years;
he has often linked it to his harsh criticism of the Israeli government.
As
he wrote in April, what he calls National Zionism
“is a branch of European neo-fascism,
which contains elements of xenophobia and ultranationalism, subordinating
democracy to other values and restricting individual rights and the freedom and
independence of the law.”
This week, he disagreed that there was
something improper about taking a top position at a museum being established by
a Polish government that he has criticized so severely.
“Following that line, I also mustn’t
cooperate with Yad Vashem because it’s under the aegis of a minister whose
policy I’m very critical of,” he said,
referring to Education Minister Naftali Bennett.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below