Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Holocaust Remembrance Day 2012





Yom HaShoah  2012
Temple Emanu-El Waterford, CT

Some things resist our words, especially on an occasion like this Remembrance Day 2012. I find that I am at a loss for words.  I search for the words but they seem so trite, so incomplete.  I have even begun to think that words escape us most at the moments of greatest joy and the times of unbearable pain.

Of course the Psalms (tehillim) set a good example for us.  The tehillim remind us that we must not remain silent even at the moment when we have sensed a loss of words.  The tehillim are bold and sometimes audacious.  The tehillim transform everyday experiences so that we can more adequately express the greatest joys and deepest sorrows of our lives. When it comes to speaking on the occasion for which we are gathered here this evening words often inadequately express the grief so many have experienced at the hands of other humans. 

Those of you who have experienced directly the horrors of the Holocaust may have even greater anguish, if not anger, that sometimes seems inexpressible.  Yet listen to the words of Holocaust Survivor Estelle Laughlin.  It is “… not enough to curse the darkness of the past. Above all, we have to illuminate the future. And I think that on the Day of Remembrance the most important thing is to remember the humanity that is in all of us to leave the world better for our children and for posterity.”  Estelle’s words shatter any hesitancy we have to express our deepest thoughts.

Those of us who come here this evening because we are the indirect, if not direct, descendants of those who have perpetuated the atrocities often stand dumbfounded and at a loss for words.   Fortunately some of Christians did not remain silent but acted as did Irena Sendler, recipient of the Righteous Among the Nations medal in 1965. It is this resistance to words that brings us together for this occasion of remembrance.  We must be reminded that despite the Holocaust we continue to see what happened in Bosnia, what happened in Rwanda, what happened in Darfur. There are still millions of people being killed.

We must this evening remember that indeed we do have each other and that presence should give voice to all our efforts to resist anything that would ever again tear us apart.  As Jews and Christians we have at least one library of books that reminds us of a common bond that we can never let be torn asunder.  That is the Hebrew Scriptures.  They hold together the common words expressed over time that we ponder, pray and perplex over together again and again. 

And this year as the theme of rescue focuses our attention we must remember the words of our common book, the Torah.  The ones I am thinking of have just been spoken at the Passover Seder with the four cups of wine, “I will free you….; I will redeem you….; I will take you….; I will bring you…..”  This is our hope.  So as Holocaust survivor Estelle Laughlin, says, “Memory is what shapes us. Memory is what teaches us. We must understand that’s where our redemption is.”  And I say we must not resist words and remain silent.

2 comments:

Verna said...

I wonder what might have happened if in the 30's and 40's we had a site like http://change.org? Would more people have lent their vote to stop the laws that lead up to the holocaust?

Kent Richards said...

If one looks at the number of people signing petitions on Change.org it is difficult to assess how many people might have signed. It could be that the Nazi powers would have shut down the Internet or limited accesss as is being done in some countries today. Even if people would have signed they would have had to do more than put their signatures on a petition. They would have had to go into action. Same problem as today with Syria. We know their is an opposition but it has not gained a lot of support around the world. Nevertheless Change.org is certainly a good project to get people thinking and hopefully acting.