Thursday, April 28, 2022

What this Curmudgeon Takes Away from the Holocaust

This is the first Yom HaShoah after my father's death. He died on August 25, 2021 (17 Ellul 5781) at age 98.

On the whole, our family was comparatively fortunate. The Pater endured forced labor in Romania, and his sister Golda lived to tell about her experiences at Auschwitz. A brother Chaim Yitzhak survived probably by reaching Soviet lines.  

Their youngest sibling Sarah died at Auschwitz. Probably of starvation.

My paternal grandfather Eliahu was killed during the war under unknown circumstances.

The surviving siblings – my father Anshel, Golda, and Chaim Yitzhak all tried to pick up the pieces of their lives. Anshel and Golda made it to New York City from a DP camp in Germany despite opposition from an anti-immigration Congress. Maybe thanks to Golda's husband Naftali, who had a relative who sponsored them. However, Naftali was a shattered man. He opened a pocket-size candy store on the lower east side. He died under tragic circumstances leaving Golda poor and widowed with two traumatized young children.

My father was also in no mental shape to make it in America despite my mother's valiant efforts. So, he left when I was a boy for Israel, where he ensconced himself in an insular haredi enclave in B'nei Brak. We reconnected 30 years later.

Chaim Yitzhak reached Israel after independence and married a widow who had several children and died before I had the chance to meet him. I do not know where in Israel he was buried.

As I say, we were relatively lucky. My father remarried and had two daughters. So as a grownup, I discovered that I was not, after all, an only child. At his death, the Pater was blessed with grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Yet he remained forever haunted. Fortunately, he derived succor from his intense and genuine piety.

Many of my contemporaries – and most of the kids I grew up with on the Lower East Side – have their own second-generation Holocaust stories. We all process our experiences in our own ways.

I find it helpful to draw political lessons from the Shoah.

1.  On January 30, 1933, Hitler came to power fair and square (more or less) in a democratic election. Lesson: the masses are asses.

2.  Once the war broke out – the allies instituted an absolute ban on Jewish immigration from Germany. The British kept the gates of Palestine closed to Jews. Lesson: A safe and secure national homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine must always be a haven for persecuted Jews. As a beacon of decency, we must offer provisional asylum to others in desperation.

3.  In July 1938, the international community at Evian abandoned the Jews to their fate. Lesson: do not rely on multilateralism.

4.  The Allies warned the Nazis in December 1942 that their atrocities would be punished. But then, no concerted efforts were undertaken by the Allies to stop the atrocities. Lesson: Israel must maintain sufficient might to do whatever needs to be done to protect the national homeland of the Jewish people.

5.  On March 23, 1941, Himmler wrote to Hitler: "I hope to see the very concept of Jewry completely obliterated." Lesson When Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei refers to Israel as a "cancerous tumor" that "must be eradicated" take this miscreant at his word. Follow the Talmudic dictum -- "If someone comes to kill you, rise up and kill him first."

6.  The Allies had confirmation by March 1942 and again in the Riegner telegram of August 11, 1942, of the industrial and systematized destruction of European Jewry and took no action. Lesson: Don't rely on the goodwill of humanity. It is otherwise engaged.

7.  Jewish tribalism made cooperation even during the Holocaust difficult or impossible.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett noted that in the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising "two Jewish organizations that fought the Germans did so not as one body but rather as two competing organizations which failed to cooperate amongst themselves. Those two organizations were the Jewish Military Union, which belonged to the right-wing revisionist movement, and the Jewish Fighting Organization, which belonged to the left-wing socialist movement."   Lesson: Those who today play up our schisms and turn their backs on elemental partnership, who stoke divisions, who claim smug religious or ethnic supremacy within our civilization, or who aid and abet the enemy as "useful idiots," are repeating the bitter mistakes of history. Damn them to hell.

8.  Leaders like Churchill, sympathetic to Jews, were stymied in their efforts to alleviate Jewish suffering. While Roosevelt, Eisenhower, and countless others up and down the ranks of the State Department, military high command, Foreign Office, etc. (and later Attlee and Bevin between 1945-1948) were either outright Jew-haters or indifferent to Jewish survival. Lesson: Israel must rely only on its own power for survival.

9.  The Holocaust only technically ended on May 8, 1945, with the liberation of the last concentration camps. Afterward, Britain refused to open the gates of Palestine and America dragged its feet in opening the immigration doors to its shores, forcing some Holocaust survivors to remain in European DP camps (including in Germany) until as late as 1950. Lesson: A secure and safe Israel is the only reliable haven for Jews.  

10. The New York Times and other newspapers buried news of Nazi atrocities because of its anti-Zionism, out of Jewish self-hatred (the owners were then assimilationist Jews), and staff antisemitism. Lesson: The Times' legacy, metamorphosized, lives on in the progressive anti-Zionist media. 

Let me add one more lesson: Stop universalizing the Holocaust. Don't pedestrianize the Holocaust. 

Don't shove Holocaust education down anyone's throat.

Of course, there are universal lessons to be learned from the Holocaust. But Jews don't need to be in the vanguard of teaching about the Shoah to non-Jews. It is a waste of time.

Nonetheless, what's most crucial and where we should devote our energies is helping young Jewish people learn the Zionist lessons of the Holocaust.  

That is not something you can do at a museum abroad that deemphasizes the Zionist message. 



Thursday, April 07, 2022

The Government Crumbles Like a Matzah & the 'Party of God' Alignment Yeastily Rises

 

Where there is bad will, there is a way.

They say that Arabs love matzah, but Muslim and Christian Arabs have no obligation to eat it during Passover under Jewish law. On any given day, many doctors, patients, and staff in Israeli hospitals are Arabs.

Should they be deprived of pita on Passover while in hospitals?

The reality is that Israel’s annual matzah crisis is more about obdurate Jews like those at the Secular Forum and its New Israel Fund backers who insist that asking citizens to refrain from bringing bread products into hospitals and IDF bases during Pesach is a knock against their civil liberties.

To which the reactionary Party of God Alignment responds: God is Great! And Netanyahu is his Messenger.

Some of the Party of God Alignment may not otherwise be halachically punctilious, but on matzah, they see a wedge issue to get Netanyahu and the clerics back into power. Some in the Party of God Alignment who are halachically fastidious may not be ethically and morally finicky, but plainly draw the line on contraband breadcrumbs.

Those who assert to want a more tolerant Israeli society may now have set the stage for a more coercive demagogic government by overplaying their hand. Self-styled liberals at the Secular Forum and doctrinaire justices at Israel’s Supreme Court fail to understand that tolerance is a two-way street that requires consideration of religious sensibilities. Respecting societal norms regarding Passover food traditions in the public domain is both politic and common decency. 

The justices serially forget they are squandering the only capital that matters – political legitimacy.

Celebrity. Fame. Stardom. It is Idit Silman whose defection from Bennett’s Yamina Party that has caused the current crisis. Her picture is all over the front pages and Internet. Like the rest of us, she's seen how for weeks now, childlike squabbling between DM Gantz, FM Lapid, and PM Bennett revealed they cannot manage their egos for the sake of the nation.

The Lady now-famous has been apoplectic that Minister of Health Nitzan Horowitz of Meretz cheerily (as opposed to reluctantly?) agreed to enforce a Supreme Court ruling that blocks hospitals and IDF bases from preventing chometz on their property during Passover. 

She and the Parties of God Alignment along with the intolerant progressives at the Secular Forum – not to mention our La La Land Supreme Court justices – have just created another period of political deadlock in Israel. 

Thanks for nothing.