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If we want peace, we first need to be truly strong

Creating a just and compassionate world sometimes requires us to fight the enemy

May 24, 2024 09:39
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The 36th March of the Living at Auschwitz on 6 May (Photo by Omar Marques/Getty Images)
3 min read

What is the correct response to the Holocaust and the events of October 7? Rabbi Joseph Dweck addressed these questions last week in an article discussing his recent visits to Poland and Israel. He concluded that we must unite to acknowledge the existence of evil in the human soul, calling it out for what it is and excluding it from our midst.

These are noble goals and Britain is blessed to have a rabbi who speaks with such a powerful moral voice. But I think there is one more crucial lesson which needs to be added.

For me it’s personal. On October 7, my son was in Sderot. When I telephoned him after Simchat Torah, he did not answer. A few seconds later, he messaged me saying Hamas had taken control of his local police station and terrorists were standing outside his local supermarket. He was alone in his flat and he’d been warned not to speak on the phone, switch on a light or even use the toilet; nothing that might draw attention to his presence. Had he made any misstep, he would now be dead or languishing in a tunnel in Gaza. Fortunately, after three days in hiding, he was serving alongside his brother in the IDF reserves.

Like Rabbi Dweck, I was in Poland for the March of the Living. My group sat in the remains of the Warsaw Ghetto recounting the story of Shmuel Zygielbojm, a Polish Jew who was smuggled out of the Warsaw Ghetto to rally support for his community who all faced a death sentence. He was tireless in his campaign. In May 1942, he even addressed the Labour Party Conference in London, pleading for help from the coalition government. But no amount of speeches, broadcasts or newspaper articles were enough to make a difference. On the contrary, even the Bermuda Conference, convened by Britain and America to discuss “the Jewish problem”, concluded that they could not offer a shred of help or hope to the beleaguered European Jews.

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Judaism