The Holocaust – The Nadir of Humankind
“For the dead and the living – we must bear witness”
Yesterday, I aged by many years in a few hours. I had heard of love and hate, of compassion and brutality, of God and the Devil. But, the reality of it all hit me when I stepped into the
The first line above adorns the entrance to this museum. Ellie Wiesel, himself a survivor of the holocaust, wrote that line as the credo of this institution. The line means that we all in the failure of our inaction, must stand witness to the horrors committed. The sheer vastness of the information and the sheer cruelty of the violence documented there force you to close your mind lest you go blind with pain and to open your mind, lest you feel it is all some fictional horror story.
At the beginning of this museum, they offer you to pick up an identification card belonging to one of the victims killed in the holocaust. This person on the identity card is your first and most shocking introduction to what is coming as you walk through the dark walkways of the museum. The card that I picked up was of Henoch Kornfeld. This child was born in the year when Hitler invaded
What goes through your mind when you read that identity card? Do you read it as a chip of the past? Or may be a little sad story? Do you treat it simply as a statistic? Or do you actually feel that little boy inside your mind, see the world through his eyes, hear his small pitiful cries for mercy and feel the world go dark slowly through hunger, torture and the smell of death in the concentration camp till your last vision of this cruel world is of your mum and dad dying besides you in that hell-hole of a gas chamber?
My three hour walk through that museum began with this shocking vision that hung in my mind.
The museum takes u through the entire decades of 1930’s and then 1940’s in a very riveting fashion. The displays, videos, audio clips, factual stories, artifacts, newspaper clippings, speeches, real life concentration camp relics, torture equipments used… all these bring that time and those horrible sufferings so shockingly close to you that you can almost hear the echoes of a failed humanity.
The
With his rise to power began the “hellification” of
Hitler began his systematic annihilation of the Jews and Roma (gypsy) of
After reading these things in the museum displays, I took a step back. For the last two thousand years, one thread of continuum is racial persecution of the Jews. Surrounded by a sea of blood-thirsty hatred, the Jews have now formed a state of
In one word: Nothing. There is no rational or justifiable crime committed by being a Jew. Their religion does not teach anything bad. They condemn violence just like us; they proclaim the “one-God” notion of the Almighty and they claim to be the righteous path to God just like every other religion in the world. That’s the truth. The only two crimes they committed were that they never had a country of their own (till
All these contributions to the society notwithstanding, Hitler began racial persecution against the Jews. As I walked through a section that portrays the concentration camps, I saw a train compartment on rails placed in the center of that room. This was an actual real train compartment from one of the trains that Germans used to transport the Jews into the concentration camps. Entire villages, towns and cities were emptied of Jews who were dumped into these trains. The compartment I saw there was about half the size of our normal metro train compartment. The plaque below it stated that the Germans filled these compartments with over 200 Jews at a time. These were really very poorly built compartments, with wooden planks for walls with gaps in them for windows. During winter, when they transported the Jews, many of them died simply of exposure to biting cold. They purposely moved these trains very slowly. The 200 souls locked in these compartments were not given food or water or even an outlet for human waste. For 4-6 weeks, they were kept moving at slow pace in these filthy conditions. When the doors opened, about half of them were dead due to cold, disease or just plain hunger. The remaining people were then exposed to the full horrors of the concentration camp.
If this description wasn’t enough, the actual concentration camp was unbearable. Without food or water, the Jews were made to do enormous manual labor. Day after day, for years on end, they were exposed to this first torture technique: death by sheer exhaustion. Those who survived this were led into various other torture methods. Killing for medical experiments, chopping off limbs to kill by pain, gas chambers, firing squad, hanging, forceful drowning… I could not believe what my eyes were seeing in that museum.
Within a period of 6 years, the Nazis killed 6 million Jews in this fashion. In the most efficient decimation campaigns in the history of mankind, the Germans killed 1 million Jews per year. And the world watched. Watched and did nothing.
It was only and only when Hitler attacked
As I walked out of the museums doors into the evening mellow sunshine of
It has been decades since then. But one thing is for sure. The West lost any moral ascendancy that it claimed over the world.
“Even passivity was a form of resistance. To die with dignity was a form of resistance. To resist the demoralizing, brutalizing force of evil, to refuse to be reduced to the level of animals, to live through the torment, to outlive the tormentors, these too were acts of resistance. Merely to give a witness of these events in testimony was, in the end, a contribution to victory. Simply to survive was a victory of the human spirit.”
– Martin Gilbert, The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy