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Olivia Marks-Woldman

ByOlivia Marks-Woldman, Olivia Marks-Woldman

Opinion

Remember: HMD is more than a day

January 24, 2013 10:24
2 min read

This coming Sunday is Holocaust Memorial Day. We in the Jewish community know the details of the Holocaust all too well, and dedicate a day in our calendar to mourn the loss of six million lives, and the damage and destruction to millions more: Yom HaShoah.

But our government is committed to ensuring that everyone commemorates it and other genocides since. In 2000, the government was a driving force behind HMD, created by international agreement at a conference, which concluded with a declaration describing the Holocaust as "an event that shook the foundations of civilisation".

In other words, the events of the Holocaust are so fundamentally shocking that it is not enough for the Jewish community to mourn. It is not enough for us to pass the memory down to our children and grandchildren. It is incumbent on everyone, regardless of age, background or ethnicity, to learn about the systematic persecution and murder of the Jewish population, to commemorate all the many victims of Nazi oppression, and to know that "never again" is meaningless when genocides have happened since.

Yet how can one day possibly be enough? How can a community service in the civic centre reach people who are working, or looking after children, or disengaged from formal activities? Doesn't it risk becoming lip service when we mouth "how important" it is, yet fail to make time to learn how genocide played out in Cambodia or Rwanda?