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Jonathan Freedland

ByJonathan Freedland, Jonathan Freedland

Opinion

This hateful general would wreck Yad Vashem

Netanyahu has nominated a new chair for Yad Vashem: Effi Eitam, a general-turned-politician from the Israeli hard right

December 18, 2020 10:22
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3 min read

There’s been so much news in 2020, you’d be forgiven if this story passed you by. But it’s significant and shocking all the same.

It relates to what is, perhaps, the only Israeli institution that has both a world class reputation and global moral authority, an institution that holds enormous meaning for Jews everywhere. It is an all but compulsory stop for any visiting world leader or aspiring politician. It has hosted princes, presidents and the last three Popes. I’m talking about Israel’s museum of the Holocaust, Yad Vashem.

Few who see it ever forget it. The permanent exhibition, re-conceived in a spectacular new building that opened in 2005, is compelling. The Hall of Names, recording the individual stories of two million Jews murdered by the Nazis — but with room to hold six million — is a monumental act of testimony. The Hall of Remembrance has acquired the status of a holy site.

And this is only the part you can see. Away from public view, some of it below ground, is a warren of archives and repositories built to house and conserve a vast collection of documents and artefacts of the Shoah. At last count — and it’s rising all the time — Yad Vashem had amassed 217 million pages of documents, 510,000 photographs, 42,000 artifacts and 12,100 pieces of art.