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Thoughts
and Reflections of a survivor on Yom Hashoha, The Holocaust
Day.
by
Solly
Ganor
April
9, 2003
I
was in the garden feeding our cat called ginger when the
sirens went off, officially announcing the day of the
Shoa. The shrill, piercing sound made ginger jump in the
air and arch its back. Then she came scuttling down to
hide between my legs, while I stood at attention.
It
was ten in the morning and the sirens were sounding all
over Israel, from Metula in the North, to Eilat in the
South. Israelis wherever they are, stop and stand at attention
for several minutes in honour of the six million Holocaust
victims. For two minutes the whole country stops in its
tracks. For us Holocaust survivors, this is of great emotional
significance. We know that we are in the only country
in the world that honours our perished families and friends
in such a dignified manner. We, the Holocaust survivors,
our children and grand children can hold up our heads
and say, yes, this our home and no one will ever get us
out of here, no matter what.
April
is the most beautiful time of the year in Israel, just
before the harsh summer heat invades the country. The
orange groves are in bloom, and the sweet delicate
bouquet of orange blossoms permeates the country side.
Passover, is also behind us and soon we will celebrate
Israel’s 54th Independence day. Yet, today is the Holocaust
day, the saddest day of the year for us survivors. Memories
of the horrors I saw in my childhood surface in my mind
and heart. Sadness is mixed with certain rage and resentment.
Why did the world allow it to happen and did nothing,
keeps going through my mind. If only Israel had existed
ten years earlier, when Hitler was still willing to let
the Jews go, there wouldn’t have been a Holocaust and
all that is near and dear to me would have survived. My
mother and brother, my uncles and aunts, cousins, friends,
teachers, rabbis, actors, writers and their descendants
would all be alive today. But Israel did not exist, and
they all perished in the flames of the Holocaust, leaving
a painful void in our hearts and souls.
Since
we live near the sea, on every Holocaust day I go down
to the beach, to sense, to smell and feel. To smell the
sea, feel the sun on my body, and sense the presence of
perhaps something good, anything that would keep me from
thinking, anything that would keep me from remembering.
The sea always had that calming effect on me. Its vastness,
as it stretches from horizon to horizon. The acrid smell
of salt and kelp. The gentle murmur of the waves
as they wash ashore on the sandy beach. And how it changes
colour gradually from dark blue, to turquoise green. One
can’t help singing hosannas to G-d’s marvellous creation.
And yet, I think of his supreme accomplishment, the creation
of man: Cruel, vengeful, destructive and in many ways
stupid, despite his intelligence. We can’t help but observe
the shape mankind is in and the shape of this beautiful
planet that is gradually sinking in the muck created by
ourselves.
Perhaps
I am being too harsh on ourselves. Perhaps it is due to
the memories I experienced as a child, on this Holocaust
day. Perhaps it isn’t really our fault.
Perhaps
these bitter thoughts are also influenced by the death
and destruction that surrounds us today. Suicide bombers,
attacking our civilian population, as a strategic weapon
hatched in the sick minds of Arafat and his Iranian, Iraqi,
and Syrian backers. Our subsequent attacks on the Palestinian
towns and villages raining down more death and destruction
on them. Soon the bombers will be on their way to our
towns again and we back to theirs. No end to the cycle
of violence. And my God, it could have been so different..
Just imagine if they, the Arabs, had accepted the United
Nations decision in 1947, for the creation of two states
living in peace side by side; Israel and Palestine, instead
of trying to destroys us, war after war, after war. Imagine
what the Middle East would have been like today.
To start with, we wouldn’t have fought five major wars
with hundreds of thousands of dead and wounded and continuos
destruction of the area. There wouldn’t have been three
million Palestinian refugees with all their misery, condemned
to rot in camps.
We
could have placed our know how for the whole regions advantage,
and the Middle East would have been today an area of prosperity
and peace. To support this claim, all one has to do is
to observe the achievements of tiny Israel in the last
fifty years, even while it had to spend billions
of dollars to defend itself. From a pauper state in 1948,
with millions of penniless refugees flooding the country,
it built its industry, agriculture, made great medical
discoveries, built a high tech industry that is only second
to the famous Silicon Valley, built a formidable army,
to name but a few of the achievements. Then observe
what had happened to our Arab neighbours since 1948, and
the conclusion is obvious. They have regressed year by
year and the only thing they have produced is a new generation
of frustrated fanatics, who hate the West, because they
are envious of its achievements and hate its culture,
because it is repulsive to them. And let us not make any
mistakes, they don’t hate America and the West because
it supports Israel; on the contrary, they hate Israel
because they see it as a bastion of the West in their
midst. We had so much to offer them, instead they chose
to fight us, and still do. It is a great pity. They never
seem to learn. We are here to stay and they might as well
make peace with that idea instead of forever fighting
it. After all it is just a matter of concept. We are Israel
and they are Ishmail, and we are supposed to be
cousins.
Solly
Ganor
Herzelia, Israel
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