Become a Member
TV

They will never be silent

January 29, 2015 13:31
29012015 shoah final2 cop

By

Barry Langford

6 min read

The recent atrocities in Paris – the shocking yet all-too-familiar sight of European Jews murdered, yet again, simply for being Jews – made this year's Holocaust Memorial Day ceremonies even more poignant and sombre. And alongside the spectre of old hatreds clothed in new ideologies walk others, less lurid but more inexorable: time itself, and its companion, silence.

This year as every year, Holocaust survivors have spoken at schools and museums, civic and community events, and in the media, compelled by the burden of their experiences to bear witness to those who come after. But their numbers are dwindling; and sooner rather than later all those surviving voices – each one a miracle in itself – will finally fall silent and the Holocaust will pass beyond the horizon of living memory.

The huge public interest about the Great War this past year has proven that history past personal recollection need not be past awareness or understanding. Still, with the death of the last Holocaust survivor a certain surety against amnesia and indifference – or, worse, denial – will have been lost. And the Paris attacks prompt concerns that without the compelling power of authentic witness, the civic defences against barbarism so painstakingly erected in the wake of the tragedies of 1933-45 might also weaken.

All of which makes it especially appropriate that this year's Holocaust commemorations also see the renewed visibility of a landmark Holocaust film uniquely dedicated to the power of memory, in fact to the act of witnessing itself. Thirty years after its original release, Claude Lanzmann's Shoah is being on BBC4, will be released for the first time on Blu-Ray and, later this year, an international colloquium of academics will gather in London, hosted by the Holocaust Research Centre at Royal Holloway, University of London, to discuss the film's achievement and legacy.