Genocide has happened again and again and againAfter the Nazi slaughter of six million Jews during World War II, the world cried out “never again.” But one of Britain’s best-known rabbis, Dr Jonathan Romain, of Maidenhead Synagogue in Berkshire, said that although it was a wonderful phrase, “never again” has proved tragically wrong – writes Trevor Grundy of ECNI.
“Genocide has happened again and again and again,” he said in an interview with ENInews ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day, 27 January 2011. The United Nations declared it an international event in November 2005.
“We only have to think about Biafra, Bosnia, Darfur and there are other examples,” said Dr Romain, who is often a spokesman for Reform Judaism in the United Kingdom. “The list is deeply depressing and screams out that Holocaust Memorial Day is needed as much now as ever before.”
The Holocaust continues to have a lasting effect, through to the second, third and fourth generations of Jews, said Godfrey Fischer, senior warden of Thanet and District Reform Synagogue in Kent where services involving hundreds of schoolchildren will be held on 27 January.
“But it’s not just the Jewish community that has been affected,” Fischer said in an interview. “You also have to think about the relatives of Germans who were adults during the war, who have discovered what terrible things their parents or grandparents did.”
This year, the day commemorates the 66th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. However, survivors and mourners have been asked by the Holocaust Memorial Trust in London to remember victims of other mass killings – the Democratic Republic of Congo, where 5.4 million people have been killed since 1998; Cambodia, where an estimated 1.7 million were murdered by the Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979; the war in Bosnia in the 1990s which claimed at least 98,000 lives; Burundi, with 50,000 deaths in 1993 and Rwanda, which saw 800,000 deaths in 1994 due to tribal conflict.
The themes of this year’s Holocaust day is “untold stories.”
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, emphasised the theme: “If the stories are not told over and again, we lose the memory of those who suffered and we risk losing something that protects our humanity… I commend for our remembrance the untold stories of Jewish people living in Britain during the medieval era, those of the Holocaust and the stories from the genocidal tragedies of many other contexts in our deeply damaged world today,” he said in a statement released on 26 January.