from the Nazi genocide? If the only answer is that it existed, that is something - but it's not good enough.
Here are three good thinkers to listen to today:
1) Cecilie Surasky of Jewish Voice for Peace is at the Durban II conference. Her reports are invaluable. You can see them here: www.muzzlewatch.com. Surasky's last post said she was on her way to the Holocaust Remembrance event taking place in Geneva tonight, so we can expect a post about that soon, too. Check Muzzlewatch.com regularly for her updates.
2) Gideon Levy wrote a useful and important column on comparisons between the occupation and the Nazi genocide. He says, "There is no one absolute evil. Comparison between the Israeli occupation and Nazism is like comparing an elephant to a fly," but, he continues, "Israel in 2009 is beginning to resemble 1930s Germany more and more." Racism against Palestinians inside of Israel bears resemblance to the 1930s. And fenced-in Qalqilya, the West Bank Palestinian city, looks "a concentration camp" - which is "not an extermination camp." Here's the article: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1079368.html
3) Roger Cohen wrote another exciting column in the New York Times. He's on a roll; check his back columns to read his courageous, smart insight into Iran, Israel, and U.S. policy. (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/columns/rogercohen/index.html). Today he writes about Germany, Israel, and moving on after World War II. He notes that "uncertainty does not so much hang over the country as inhabit its very fiber." Notions of fear and vulnerability permeate (and are invoked by politicians and spokespeople for Israel) - yet Israel is strong: it has a nuclear arsenal, peace with Egypt and Jordan, and a "cast-iron security guarantee" from the U.S. So what would moving on from the Nazi genocide look like for Israel? Cohen ends with this message "Closure is the overcoming of horror. It is the achievement of normality through responsibility. It cannot be attained through the inflation of threats, the perpetuation of fears, or retreat into the victimhood that sees every act,
however violent, as defensive." (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/opinion/20iht-edcohen.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=roger%20cohen&st=cse)
These sources are three among many who honor and draw lessons from the horror of the Nazi genocide while insisting that we act boldly for full human rights. We need to hear more of their voices and amplify them.
Sarah Anne Minkin
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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Judith Norman
Lincoln Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
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Dear JPN friends. Thank you very much for your labour, your informations, your articles... I like to hear your voices. The voices we can hardly hear in the great mass media. During the killings in Gaza at the end of the last year and the 2009 beginning and during all these months your voices have been very important for me, they still are and so they will continue.
ReplyDeleteI wish one day there could be justice and peace.
Thank you again. Sincerely,
M. Beatriz Tostado
Spain