Become a Member
Karen Pollock

By

Karen Pollock,

Karen Pollock

Opinion

Let history still bear witness to the Holocaust

September 18, 2013 13:42
3 min read

In the Warsaw Ghetto in August 1942, 19-year-old David Graber, knowing he might die in the next few hours, buried a note with the words: “I would love to see the moment in which the great treasure will be dug up and scream the truth at the world... may the treasure fall into good hands, may it last into better times, may it alarm and alert the world to what happened… in the 20th century… May history be our witness.”

David Graber did not survive to witness the moment when his note was discovered, but the courage that it took for him to write his message to the world, under threat of almost certain death, is a symbol of why, in 1988, Merlyn Rees and Greville Janner felt the world needed to understand what happened during the darkest days of the 20th century.

Seeing the lack of knowledge about the Holocaust throughout British society, and recognising the danger that this posed, they established the Holocaust Educational Trust.

On Monday evening, we were honoured to welcome the Prime Minister to our appeal dinner, marking the 25th anniversary of that insightful decision by Merlyn and Greville. In the presence of the Chief Rabbi, the US ambassador and the Israeli ambassador, parliamentarians and more than 500 guests, the Prime Minister made a moving tribute to Holocaust survivors, the people who, despite the horrors of their past, have made it their mission to speak to as many young people as possible, travelling tirelessly around the country to share their testimony.