The
Holocaust Memorial Industry is reinforcing the very forces that gave rise to the
Holocaust
What
is remarkable is that the farther away we get from the Holocaust the greater is
the desire to ‘remember’ it. You might think that in the years immediately
following the end of the war that American Jewry would be obsessed by nothing
else. Not a bit of it.
The
only group in American society who regularly warned people to ‘Remember the 6 million murdered’ were
the Communist Party. [Peter Novick, p.94, The Holocaust in American Life, 2000]
In the era of McCarthyism Communists were the last people that the Jewish
establishment wanted to be seen with. Novick writes that
‘on one
point there was striking unanimity among the principal Jewish agencies: the
danger that promoting a widespread consciousness of the Holocaust would
inevitably promote the image of the Jew as victim.’
On
3 separate occasions –1946, 1947 and 1948 the major Jewish organisations -
including the American Jewish Committee, the Anti-Defamation League, American
Jewish Congress, Jewish Labor Committee and Jewish War Veterans, vetoed the
idea of a Holocaust memorial in New York. (Novick, p.123)
Nathan Glazer, the
American neoconservative, in American
Judaism in 1957, observed that the Holocaust ‘had had remarkably slight effects on the inner life of American Jewry.’
(Novick, 105)
Auschwitz death camp survivor Jacek Nadolny, 77, tattooed with camp number 192685, holds up a wartime photo of his family, as he poses for a portrait in Warsaw. January 7, 2015\ REUTERS
|
It
was even worse in Israel. Novick describes how Israel Gutman, a
historian at Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum and a survivor of the Warsaw
Ghetto resistance, told how Jews in Palestine listened to survivor’s stories
with ‘a forced patience’ that was
soon exhausted.
‘American
Jews, or Jews in the Yishuv would have been incredulous at the idea... that
survivors’ memories were a ‘precious legacy’ to be preserved.’ (Novick,
p.83)
In a 220
page Israeli history textbook published in 1948, just one page was devoted to
the Holocaust compared to 10 pages on the Napoleonic wars. [Edith Zertal, p.94, Israel’s
Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood, 2011] The survivors were
considered an embarrassment and Israelis described them as sapon (soap, based
on the myth that the murdered were 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]
Novick
describes how, in Israel there was the theme of the ‘survival of the worst’. Ben Gurion describes the Holocaust
survivors as
‘people who would not have
survived if they had not been what they were – hard, evil and selfish people,
and what they underwent there served to destroy what good qualities they had
left.’ (Novick,
p.69)
So what is
it that has changed such that we now have an abundance of Holocaust memorials
and artefacts? Even the bogus International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition
of anti-Semitism implies that it has a connection with the murdered Jews. Both Norman
Finkelstein and Novick suggests that the Holocaust Industry sprung up only after
the victory over the Arab countries in the war of 1967. (The Holocaust Industry, p.26; Verso 2003, Novick p.148).
Israel HaYom cartoon: concentration camp barbed wire morphs into an IAF F-16 (Shlomo Cohen) |
Over
30 years ago Israel exploded, in
Daniel Blatman’s words,
when Prof. Yehuda
Elkana published “The
Need to Forget” Elkana, a child survivor of Auschwitz, argued that the time
had come to forget the Holocaust. It should no longer be commemorated on a
national basis. Worship of the Holocaust
served nationalist and racist purposes.
Hungary's antisemitic Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Israel's racist prime minister Netanyahu |
Elkana
became President of the Central
European University in 1999, a university set up by George Soros. It is
ironic that at the end of last year the University announced that it would
close and relocate to Vienna when Hungary’s anti-Semitic Prime Minister Viktor
Orban, refused to allow it to remain in Hungary. The campaign against Soros was
supported, indeed initated
by the Israeli government and Benjamin Netanyahu who, like Orban, saw Soros as
an enemy.
Even
the title of this essay is likely to be subject to criticism since any mention
of the Holocaust must be accompanied by solemnity, awe and reverential
distance. As befits any religion and the Holocaust has become a secular religion,
its basic tenets cannot be questioned. The Holocaust is an experience that must
be mediated via Holocaust scribes, academics and organisations such as the
Holocaust Educational Trust and Yad Vashem,
Israel’s Holocaust museum.
View of section of the Auschwitz Nazi concentration camp on Feb. 6, 1961 in Oswiecim, Poland
|
Above
all the Holocaust cannot be understood. According to Elie Wiesel, the Auschwitz
survivor and arch Zionist, ‘Auschwitz
cannot be explained nor can it be visualized... The Holocaust transcends
history...’ (Novick, p.211).
If
the Holocaust cannot be explained and doesn’t belong to history then it carries
no universal lessons. Its only explanation lies in the very existence of the
Jews, in other words eternal and unchanging anti-Semitism. That is why for Israel
the Holocaust has become a foundational myth whose only purpose is colonial.
In
a macabre re-enactment, only 59 years too late, Israeli fighter jets overflew Auschwitz in
2003 to rub home the message that if only Israel had been in existence at the
time there would have been no Holocaust. The National Museum of
Auschwitz-Birkenau deplored
this crass display. Ehud Barak, former Chief of Staff and later Prime Minister of
Israel stated
that ‘we have arrived 50 years too late.’
Israeli soldiers at the Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, May 4, 2016.Olivier Fitoussi
|
Zionism
salves its conscience about its record during the Holocaust by fantasising about
what might have been if Zionism had achieved its state earlier. What it doesn’t
ask is how and why the Zionist movement impeded rescue. The dead of Auschwitz have
been summoned in a macabre parade in the cause of Israel’s military might.
The
use to which Holocaust remembrance is cynically put is evidenced by the Israeli
state’s close connections to the far-Right Polish government which, when not
actively encouraging anti-Semitism engages in its own sophisticated form of Holocaust
denial. This is the meaning of the Polish government’s Holocaust law which Netanyahu’s
sordid agreement legitimised.
Israel’s sanctification of the Holocaust is intended to manipulate the past in
order to shape the present and distort the future.
Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki visits the Ulma Family Museum of Poles Who Saved Jews during WWII in Markowa, Poland. February 2, 2018AGENCJA GAZETA/ REUTERS
|
There
are many lessons that can be learnt from the Holocaust. One is to be vigilant
against the rise of racism and fascism. Another is to understand that if
Germany, containing the most cultured society in Europe could turn to racial fascism
and genocide then so can any people. All
peoples, given the right set of circumstances, can become murderers and
accomplices to genocide. Jews are no exception.
March of the Living |
Every
year thousands of Israeli school children visit Auschwitz and take part in the
March of the Living just before Israel’s Yom HaShoah. The programme states
that:
The
International March of the Living is an annual educational program, bringing
individuals from around the world to Poland and Israel to study the history of
the Holocaust and to examine the roots of prejudice, intolerance and hatred.
A woman, wrapped in an Israeli flag, stands in front of barbed wire at Auschwitz-Birkenau as people take part in the annual 'March of the Living,' in Oswiecim, April 19, 2012. AFP
Wrapped
in Israeli flags, which to Palestinians is what the swastika was to the Jews,
these Israeli marchers represent Zionist military might and ethnic
cleansing. It is in this way that Israel
has subverted and corrupted the meaning of the Holocaust.
It
is no wonder that all the evidence concerning Israel’s youth is that they are
becoming even more racist and right-wing than their parents’ generation.
Gideon
Levy wrote that
I have yet to
hear a single teenager come back from Auschwitz and say that we mustn’t abuse
others the way we were abused. There has yet to be a school whose pupils came
back from Birkenau straight to the Gaza border,
saw the barbed-wire fence and said, Never again. The message is always the
opposite. Gaza is permitted because of Auschwitz.
Aerial view showing the layout of the largest concentration camp and death camp run by Nazi Germany during World War II at Auschwitz near the Polish town of Oswiecim, Poland, Aug. 25, 1944AP
|
Despite visiting Auschwitz ‘on
patriotic brainwashing trips’ Israeli schoolchildren know nothing of what
led up to the Final Solution. ‘At most
they can tell you it was because of anti-Semitism, an explanation that suits
the victim identity nurtured from childhood.’
Far
from combating racism Holocaust Remembrance increases and reinforces the existing
high level of racism in Israeli society. It provides Zionism’s racism with a
moral legitimacy.
As
Richard Silverstein noted in his article Yom
HaShoah and Its False Premises Israel’s veneration and sacralisation of the
Holocaust is in inverse proportion to its treatment of Israel’s living
Holocaust survivors. Despite taking billions of dollars from the German
government as reparations, Israel has kept them in abject poverty.
Brazil's far-Right President Bolsonaro is welcomed by Yad Vashem |
The
elevation of the Jewish Holocaust above all other acts of genocide not only
suggests that it is unique but that it has nothing to tell us beyond the fact
that it occurred. If the purpose of remembering and commemorating acts of
genocide is to prevent their reoccurrence and to act as a warning against their
repetition, why single out one act of genocide? The genocide of the Gypsies and
the Disabled are all but omitted from Holocaust museums such as Yad Vashem and
the Washington US Holocaust Museum. The genocide of Africans in the slave trade
or Armenians forms no part of Holocaust Memorial Day.
Indeed
from the days of Herzl onwards there has been a determined refusal by Zionism to
acknowledge the Armenian massacres and genocide. Lucy Dawidowicz, a prominent Zionist
historian went so far as to say that unlike the Nazis, the Turks had a ‘rational’ reason for massacring Armenians.
Elie Wiesel, Alan Dershowitz and Arthur Hertzberg, all prominent Zionists,
withdrew from an international
conference on genocide in Tel Aviv when the sponsors refused to remove
sessions on the Armenians. (Novick pp. 192-193, Finkelstein pp. 69-70) The Zionist lobby in the United States has
repeatedly opposed any commemoration of the Armenian holocaust.
Yehuda Bauer, Professor of Holocaust
Studies at the Hebrew University Jerusalem, in a debate with Dr Sybil Milton, the
Senior Resident Historian at the US Holocaust Memorial Council argued
that
‘the
tragedy of the Gypsies’ whilst being ‘ no less poignant, and no less horrible’
was nonetheless not part of the Holocaust. Whilst ‘it happened at the same time
as the Holocaust, and there are of course many similarities. Yet it appears to
me that the Holocaust is very much a unique case. If someone prefers to call it
Judeocide, that is his her privilege. It is exactly the same thing: it is the
mass murder of the Jews at the hands of the Nazis.’
For
Zionism the Holocaust is a Jewish only affair. Sybil Milton, who was herself
Jewish, responded succinctly:
‘(The) Nazi genocide, popularly known as the Holocaust, can
be defined as the mass murder of human beings because they belonged to a biologically
defined group. Heredity determined the selection of the victims. The Nazi
regime applied a consistent and inclusive policy of extermination- based on
heredity- only against three groups of human beings: the handicapped, Jews, and
Gypsies.’
This correspondence ‘Gypsies
and the Holocaust’ can be found in The History Teacher, Vol. 25, No.
4. (Aug., 1992), pp. 513-521.
We are now living in an era where
Israeli Rabbis in an elite pre-military training school can tell
their students that Hitler was right, even if he chose the wrong victims. For
all their commemoration of the Holocaust, even the most basic and elementary anti-racist
and anti-fascist sentiments are missing in Israel. It is, after all, a state
where the term ‘leftist’ is a form of
abuse and where Donald Trump is more
popular than any other country. Commemoration of the Holocaust serves a
wholly nationalist and militarist agenda.
Zionism has appropriated the Holocaust and
subverted it. When I was involved in the Anti-Nazi League, a mass anti-fascist
movement which defeated the National Front in the late 1970’s our posters
proclaimed ‘Never Again’. This also became the slogan and title of a book by Rabbi
Meir Kahane of the Judeo-Nazi Kach movement.
The French military accompany the genocidal Interamhawe militia in Rwanda |
This focus by political elites on the Holocaust
has had no effect on the occurrence of genocide. In the late 1970’s, as a
direct consequence of America’s secret war in Cambodia, there occurred the genocide of nearly 2 million Cambodians. In 1994 there was
another genocide, in Rwanda, when up to 1 million Tsutsis and moderate Hutus
were murdered by the Hutu Interahamwe as French troops stood
by and even protected the murderers. This is the same France that has all
but made BDS illegal in the name of ‘anti-Semitism’.
Bill Clinton, who waxed
lyrical about the Nazi Holocaust when opening the US Holocaust Museum in
1993 refused to intervene the following year in Rwanda. The US Administration
was specifically
warned about a ‘"final solution
to eliminate all Tutsis" but decided against intervention.
Yad Vashem
What makes Israel’s use of the
Holocaust particularly obscene is the role of Yad Vashem. It openly welcomes
through its doors people like Viktor Orban, who last July faced an unprecedented
picket
by Holocaust survivors and others when he visited Yad Vashem. Orban, fresh from
his campaign against Soros, praised as an ‘exceptional
statesman’ Admiral Horthy, under whom nearly half a million Jews were
deported to Auschwitz.
Hitler admirer and Philippine President Duterte pays homage at Yad Vashem |
Following
him last September was Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippine President who compared
himself to Hitler. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro paid a visit in April to
Yad Vashem. He described the Nazis as ‘leftists whilst ‘forgiving’
them for the Holocaust. South Africa’s Prime Minister, John Vorster, who
was interned during the war for his support for the Nazis visited
Yad Vashem in 1976. This prompted Professor Israel Shahak, a child survivor of
the Warsaw Ghetto and Belsen to speak
of Yad Vashem’s behaviour as ‘‘vile and
‘truly beneath contempt.’
Daniel Blatman, a Holocaust researcher at the Hebrew
University described
Yad Vashem 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.’
Matti
Friedman in the New York Times described
the reaction of staff at Yad Vashem to the long list of far-Right visitors. One
staff member told him that
‘“There
is distress here, and even anger, 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.”
A member of a white supremacy group gives the fascist salute during a gathering in West Allis, Wisconsin, September 3, 2011REUTERS/Darren Hauck |
Of
course this should be taken with a pinch of salt given its record.
Friedman
described an incident last June when Austrian chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, was told
that the names of Austria’s lost Jewish communities, which were on a wall he
was passing, had recently seen anti-Jewish incidents involving members of the
Austrian Freedom Party, a party whose first two leaders were former S.S.
officers. Mr. Kurz’s government is in coalition with the Freedom Party.
Kurz’s guide, Deborah Hartmann, mentioned to the chancellor that some of
his allies were people who “need to be
informed what the Holocaust was.” The Austrian embassy ‘made a rare official complaint’ and Yad
Vashem issued an apology.
Blatman noted
the absence of Yad Vashem from the 5th Global Conference
on Genocide in Jerusalem in 2016. Why? It has nothing to say on anything
bar the Jewish genocide. Blatman wrote of how
None
of the hundreds of scientific events organized by Yad Vashem has been dedicated
to the Holocaust and genocide.... You have to look hard to find any reference
to the destruction of other populations in the Holocaust, and its chief aim
seems to be to silence criticism. Similar museums in Paris and Washington hold
regular activities on these topics
Whilst Yad Vashem studies what happened to the Jews in Polish or
Ukrainian cities ‘they rarely address
Nazi atrocities against other ethnic groups’. They study the minute detail
of what happened to the Jews without ever seeing the wider picture. Yad Vashem
‘helps keep the Holocaust in a narrow
Jewish ghetto that serves the xenophobic manipulations Israel makes of it.’
That is why Yad Vashem has never given birth to a comprehensive book on
the Holocaust such as Gerald Reitlinger’s The
Final Solution or Raul Hilberg’s Destruction
of the European Jews. Holocaust research in Israel has done nothing to
combat racism.
That
was the conclusion
of Professor Elkana. If what Elkana wrote was
true 31 years ago it is even more true now. For Zionism and the Israeli state,
the Holocaust functions not as a warning against the dangers of racism but as
means of silencing their critics. The Holocaust is Israel’s get out of jail
free card. Elkana wrote:
‘Lately I
have become more and more convinced that the deepest political and social factor
that motivates much of Israeli society in its relations with the Palestinians
is not personal frustration, but rather a profound existential
"Angst" fed by a particular interpretation of the lessons of the
Holocaust and the readiness to believe that the whole world is against us, and
that we are the eternal victim. In this ancient belief, shared by so many
today, I see the tragic and paradoxical victory of Hitler. Two nations, metaphorically
speaking, emerged from the ashes of Auschwitz: a minority who assert,"this
must never happen again," and a frightened and haunted majority who
assert, "this must never happen to us again."
Elkan
cited Thomas Jefferson as having written that democracy and worship of the past
are incompatible. Elkana’s conclusion was that ‘For our part, we must learn to forget!... They must uproot the domination
of that historical "remember!" over our lives.’
Gideon
Levy wrote
similarly
‘We have to
forget as quickly as possible and make others forget to the degree possible.
The time has come to get past the past. We needn’t erase it, but put it in its
place; it’s over.’
The Holocaust
cannot be forgotten. The question is how it is remembered, by whom and for what
purpose. Zionism’s abuse of Holocaust memory has to be challenged. Under
capitalism all memory serves a purpose. Holocaust remembrance is no different. Levy
wrote that
The legacy of the Holocaust has
caused Israel fateful damage; it solidified nationalism and validated
militarism instead of shaping humanism, justice, morality and compliance with
international law, which in Israel 2019 are considered treason or weakness.
Levy argues
that what drives racism and hatred of Arabs is ‘self-victimization. After the Holocaust we are permitted to do anything,
and of course, only with force.’
The
Holocaust needs to be reclaimed by the Left and Anti-Fascism. For too long the Zionist movement has got
away with harnessing the Holocaust to the chariot of racism and ethnic
cleansing.
Tony
Greenstein
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below