So my
seven-year-old grandson asked me recently.
No,” I
answered him. “The Shoah ended seventy years ago.”
“Oh,” the
wheels were turning in Yehuda’s mind. “So, was Uncle Gary in it?”
“No,” I repeated
and explained that my brother-in-law who’d come to Israel to celebrate his
seventieth birthday last summer was born in America.
“What about
Opa?”
Again I was
able to reply in the negative.
“Thankfully Opa and his family were able to leave Germany in time.”
“But,” his
other grandmother joined the conversation. “Saba Yoel was in the Shoah. He had
a wife and a daughter who were murdered. I had a sister I never knew.”
Her words
intrigued our grandson but they bothered her eighteen-year-old daughter.
“Why are you
telling him all this? He’s too young!”
Although I
appreciated the feeling of Yehuda’s aunt I understood her mother. So quietly,
in English, so my grandson wouldn’t understand, I tried to justify talking
about the Shoah to a child.
“When your
mother and I grew up most survivors would not say anything about the Shoah and
that wasn’t healthy. Yes, it’s a
traumatic subject but he’s already seen anti-Semitic horror.”
I didn’t
need to elaborate. She knew that Yehuda was well aware that the grandfathers of
his playmates next door had both been murdered in terror attacks before he was
born. After he was born, when he was only three, Elad Fogel, his buddy down the
block, was stabbed to death along with his parents and two of his brothers by
two Arab terrorists. There’d been no way to hide that attack from him.
And the attacks continue. Just on Holocaust
Remembrance Night two young Jews were rundown by an Arab driver in Jerusalem.
Sholom Yochai Sherki, may HaShem avenge his blood, succumbed to his injuries Thursday
morning.
His companion, Shira Bat Adel Ada, is fighting for her life. I didn’t
know Sholom but my youngest son did and he went to the funeral. I’ve lost count
of how many funerals for terror victims my children have gone to. The Arab
terrorists are trying hard to finish up the Nazis’ goal but they won’t succeed.
Sholom Yochai Sherki, courtesy of his family, may they be comforted among the mourners of Zion |
In Israel
six days following Holocaust Remembrance Day is another Remembrance Day, this
one for our fallen soldiers and terror victims. A most difficult day it’s
followed by a joyous celebration for Israel Independence Day. And despite
boycotts and condemnation, we are here to stay. As Eliezer Ben Yisroel penned
in his powerful letter to the world written in 1969, Do you think you can
break us now after all we have been through? Do you really believe that after
Dachau and Auschwitz we are frightened by your threats of blockades and
sanctions?*
Now, in the
twenty-first century, I feel calls for concessions and “peace” deals more
threatening than the blockades and sanctions. When Israel gave away Yamit and
the Sinai we were rewarded with a war in the north. The Oslo Peace Accords gave
us the Oslo War in which thousands of Israelis civilians were murdered by PLO
policemen armed with weapons supplied by us. After the Evacuation of Gush Katif
Hamas rockets began hitting Tel Aviv.
When my
grandson questioned me about the Shoah I could have told him that’s it’s been
ongoing with short breaks here and there ever since we were slaves in Egypt. I
won’t say that to him, though. Instead, I need to repeat to him the words we
say every year at the Seder. In every generation they rise up against us to
destroy us and the Holy One blessed be He saves us from their hands
Am
Yisroel Chai! The
Jewish people live! And we will continue to do so!
*to read the
full letter go to In Honor of Jerusalem Day, May 7th, 2013
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