Remembering the Holocaust
Six million Jews and millions of others, including Gypsies, Slavs, homosexuals, the mentally ill and the infirm were murdered by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The magnitude of brutality, the remorseless cruelty, and the mass murder during the Holocaust are unique. However the root causes of the Holocaust continue. Racial hatred, economic crises, human psychological and moral flaws are still ominously common. Saying this, we must have the courage to remember the Holocaust, no matter how disturbing the memories may be. For only informed, understanding, and morally committed people can prevent such persecution from happening again. There will never be enough remembrance of the Holocaust. To forget about the holocaust is to ignore the tragedies many millions suffered, to bring about a possibility it could be repeated, and to agree with Adolf Hitler's philosophy. "Never think there is an easy way to make an end to such bitter memories...Never think there is a way to forgive the hate in the human heart...or an easy way to believe that the worst has occurred and is past. Only know that hope lives when people remember." (Simon Wiesenthal) The persecution of people is always and everywhere intol
"We shall never let the victims be forgotten for if we do, we will forget that the perpetrator can be in all of us" (Rudi Raab). It requires courage to remember the Holocaust: to squarely face the images of such remorseless evil; to ache for the unconsoled grief of children and parents; to experience the emptiness and loss; to read the unimaginable testimonies to the twisted, vicious inventiveness of the human mind. But if the lost lives of these millions are to have an enduring meaning, we must remember and be vigilant. Then the ashes and unmarked graves of these victims can become the sacred ground from which human hope, tolerance and moral courage will rise. "Take heed...lest you forget the things which your eyes have seen, and...teach them to your children and to your children's children." (Deuteronomy 4:9). This quote holds very true for remembering the Holocaust. It basically means to remember the past and to pass it along so that others will not forget. Remembering the Holocaust is important because if we ignore what occurred there is a likelihood that it could be repeated. The likelihood grows with each person that denies or forgets this atrocity occurred. For every person that denies the Holocaust, there are probably fifty more that remember what happened. There are museums built to help remember the Holocaust in cities all over the world. They educate both young
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Approximate Word count = 939
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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