Become a Member
Opinion

Judaism is beginning to flouish again in Berlin

The survivors who accompany groups to the camps are driven to inspire the next generation

November 4, 2021 12:02
AN4T9313
3 min read

Berlin is a strange city. Ultra-modern and uber-cool today, yet a place that stands as a living memorial to the pain of the twentieth century. 'It was supposed to be better than the others, our twentieth century, but it won't have time to prove it'. So wrote the Nobel prize winning Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska towards the close of the century. In Berlin, you experience the memorial to the scale of that failure.

Physical memorials permeate every aspect of contemporary Berlin. They are on a series of lampposts recalling the discrimination of the Nuremberg laws, they are engraved on the remains of the Berlin Wall that once divided this city, and they are underfoot in the form of the 'Stolpersteine', the 'stumble stones' which mark the places Jews once called home. Above all, they exist in the form of thousands of stones next to the Brandenburg Gate, forming the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Whatever you think about the suitability or effectiveness of these memorials, in Berlin they are inescapable.

Berlin is on my mind this week, having recently returned from a visit there as an educator for the remarkable March of the Living UK. The role of an educator is to guide and teach, yet immersive journeys of this sort often mean that the educator learns as much as the participants. On this particular trip, I learned a new insight into the true purpose of a memorial.

It was the inspirational Harry Olmer, survivor of Buchenwald and the forced munitions factory of Skarzysko-Kammienne, a place he describes as 'hell on earth', who said it best. After a discussion on the topic, he simply quoted the verse from Deuteronomy, recalling the attack of Amalek against the Jewish people after they left Egypt: 'Remember what Amalek did to you....'. The purpose of a memorial he said, is 'Zachor', to remember.