Printed 24.01.2021 20:37 26-04-2006 Brian Sabin
Holocaust Rememberance Day marks the 63rd anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising. Commemorations in honor of the victims were held throughout the
Czech Republic, and education ministers from across Europe met for a
second day of talks on Holocaust education. An elderly survivor at one
memorial in Prague reads the names and fates of many Czech Holocaust
victims: A ghetto, a concentration camp, and the end.
"My name is Michal Frankl. I am from the Terezin Institute in Prague, and today we have a commemoration of the victims of the Yom ha Shoah (Holocaust) from the Czech lands and other prisoners from the former Terezin Ghetto. The program of this commemorative event is very simple. Basically, it's reading names. Also, we are showing photos of the victims that should illustrate what happened to them." The commemoration was organized by the Terezin Initiative Institute and the Czech Union of Jewish Students. The date for Holocaust Remembrance Day was not chosen by chance, according to Mr. Frankl. "This is the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, which started according to the non-Jewish calendar on April 19, 1943. The resistance groups in the Warsaw Ghetto succeeded; not to save their lives, but to defend themselves against the Germans for a significant period of time."
"For all of our members, it's a very personal thing. It's very much connected with their families, with the fact that their grandparents went through the Shoah." As the names were read, a slideshow displayed the faces and names of the victims on a large screen behind the lectern. About twenty feet in front of the stage, volunteers handed out small booklets with these photos and a short story about the lives of the victims. Zuzana Kosakova, from the Union of Jewish Students, says that after she visited the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C. she wanted to personalize - and publicize - the experience of victims to keep their memories alive.
Michal Frankl agrees. His organization is working to build a database, called the Terezin Album project, which will put a face and story to Czech Holocaust victims. He hopes that the Terezin Album project resembles a family album. Meanwhile, across town at Charles University, Former President Vaclav Havel answers questions after his keynote address. He spoke before a seminar of European education ministers. During his speech Mr. Havel described the Holocaust as a terrible example of what can happen when people give in to the temptation to hate. The ministers were gathered for a second day of discussions about the teaching of the Holocaust in European schools.
"We are used to attacking scientific problems in a way that a theory is attacked. We look for reasons why it is, or it is not, correct. That's okay with many scientific problems and so on. With the Holocaust, because it is so sensitive of an issue both for the victims and their relatives and also politically sensitive, it is kind of difficult to apply this method." One reason for this difficulty is the risk of Holocaust denial. Deniers themselves use pseudo-scientific arguments. "Still, we cannot pretend to the students that it is not possible to apply scientific methods to the Holocaust. It is. But we need to be aware that any discussions are at the theoretic level. It's not anything like a political rejection of the fact of the Holocaust." Piles of documents, photographs and official testimonies are all evidence of the Holocaust. Camps and crematoria still stand. And of course there are the memories of the survivors. Some who survived the ghetto in Terezin told their stories on Monday to this week's conference.
"With this we want to stress that the victims whose names we read were not just Jews. They were also citizens of Prague, or other inhabitants of the Czech lands. They were integrated into their societies, and their commemoration is not just a matter for the Jewish community."
"The people are already dying. The generation of our grandparents is dying. We are really looking for some documents. We are really missing the actual people who lived in the time. It's very important for us to find these personal stories, because these personal stories are something you can understand. You cannot understand six million people. You cannot imagine it. By doing these personal documents and small remarks and remembrances on the real people, we believe we actually help to understand what the Shoah was." Understand what happened, and know what to look for, so that it never happens again. Copyright © Radio Praha, 1996 - 2003 |