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Understanding the Holocaust
by Rabbi Yitzchak Berkowitz
In approaching this most difficult of issues, we confront the very foundations of our lives.

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A central pillar of Jewish belief is that nothing happens in a vacuum. History has meaning, oppression has meaning, suffering has meaning. We are a people whose essence is meaning. It’s the lifeblood of who we are and what we stand for as a nation.

If this is true – and the Jewish people have fought to preserve this truth for 3,500 years – then the Holocaust must have meaning as well. Beneath the suffering and pain of the Holocaust lie the seeds of understanding our unique mission as Jews even today.

This is not to suggest that any one explanation will ever fully help us to come to terms with the persecution and murder of millions of innocent people.

Still, it does mean that we must try to contend with the Holocaust on a number of levels. For with every victim an entire world was lost; (1) with every survivor, a new lesson must be learned. In this light, the meaning of the Holocaust is as varied as the human heart itself.

But we must also wrestle with the Holocaust from a larger perspective, a perspective that includes the history of the Jewish people. For the Holocaust is the story of the Jewish nation under siege. It was a war to destroy the Jewish people and the message we have been trying to bring to mankind from time immemorial.

The Chosen People

"You shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." (2) These are the words that describe the Jewish people’s unique covenant with God. We have been chosen to be a light unto the nations,(3) an eternal people bearing a message of God’s morality: "Love your neighbor as yourself" (4)... "Justice, justice shall you pursue(5)..." "Do not afflict the widow and the orphan(6)..." "Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore(7)..."

Being chosen means you are different. Your laws are different, your ways are different, your history is different. Being chosen means holding fast to that message through all the peaks and valleys of history, for all the generations. It means living for the truth of that message and dying for the truth of that message. It means holding ourselves to a higher standard – in the way we think, the way we speak, the way we act, the way we dress, the way we eat.

It means honoring our Creator in the way we conduct ourselves in public as well as in the privacy of our home. In the way we raise our children and take care of our old. In the laws we live by and the values we are trying to impart to the people – and nations – around us.

A World Against Us

Anti-Semitism was born with the birth of the Jewish people. After all, it can be exceedingly irritating to be faced with the voice of human conscience when you yourself have other plans and desires. It is one of the not-so-subtle ironies of the Hebrew language that the word Sinai is closely linked to the word for "hatred" – "sina".

But the essence of anti-Semitism runs much deeper than simply the Jews and their morality standing in the way of the conqueror’s ambition or of mankind’s propensity for lust. Anti-Semitism is part of our destiny as Jews. It is part and parcel of our covenant with God. It is the one mechanism in the collective human psyche that never lets us forget we are Jews, never lets us forget we different, never lets us forget we have a message to bring to mankind.

One of the high points of the Passover seder joyfully testifies to this unique phenomenon of history. With a glass of wine raised high, we declare that in every generation the nations of the world will rise up against us, to try to wipe us out and destroy the message we bear – but to no avail. The Jewish people is eternal, and our message is eternal.(8)

When the Jewish people lives up to its potential as a light unto the nations, the moral fabric of the entire world is improved.(9) The nations of the world will see the beauty of Jewish values and will praise us and want to emulate our ways. (10)

At such times, anti-Semitism may still rear its ugly head, but no power in the world will be able to harm us. And the Almighty Himself will turn over heaven and earth to attest to the fact of this awesome truth.

But if that light is lacking, then the moral fabric of the world quickly sinks into decay. And then it is only a matter of time before the Jews are seen as little more than an irritating reminder of an old-fashioned, restrictive morality, an enemy of the "new world order" that wants nothing to do with the Chosen People and their God.

Such times are times of national tragedy indeed. In place of the miraculous protection that once graced our people, we are left vulnerable to the cruelest whims of humanity. Hunted down, persecuted, put to death in the millions simply because we are Jews.

Such times are times of great suffering, but not of suffering in vain. The nature of our covenant means that even when we are subjected to the unimaginable cruelty of a Holocaust, the message remains the same: There must be a better way. Mankind must be taught to rise above his baser instincts. In that way, the suffering itself becomes the source of the Jewish message to the world.

The Lessons Of The Holocaust

Where was God during the Holocaust? As a people, we declare that God was right there – pleading with us to pay attention, never letting us forget how much work remains to be done in this world.

After the Holocaust, is there a Jew on earth who would choose to be born a Nazi instead of a Jew? After the Holocaust, is there a Jew on earth who does not see the need for a nation of teachers? Who else will help mankind rise above its potential for such cruelty if not the Jews?

More than anything else, the Holocaust was a clarion call to the Jewish people: Remember your covenant, be a light unto the nations. Show the world what it means to be given the gift of life, what it means to be created in the image of God, what it means to live according to the values of justice and mercy, what it means to be a nation dedicated to those goals.

SOURCES:

1. Sanhedrin: 37a (return to text)
2. Exodus: 19:6 (return to text)
3. Isaiah 42:6 (return to text)
4. Leviticus 19:18 (return to text)
5. Deuteronomy 16:20 (return to text)
6. Exodus 22:21 (return to text)
7. Isaiah 2:4 (return to text)
8. See Passover Hagadah; "For in every generation..." (return to text)
9. See Mesilias Yesharim, pg. 21, Feldheim edition; (return to text)
10. Deuteronomy 4:6; 33:9 with Rashi's explanation (return to text)


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VISITORS COMMENTS: 15

(15) Ashley, 22/3/2002
All my life I have had to study the holocaust and I have never understood the greatness of the lesson from the tragedy to be learned until i researched and found this website.
This site has opened my eyes to a lot of new and interesting things about the holocaust that I never have understood or even knew about in all my past research of the terrible tragedy.

(14) Mike York, 6/11/2004
trying to understand
To this day I'm trying to understand how people can subject fellow humans to the sort of inhmane acts and treatment the victims of the holocost suffered and what other people in other countries suffer today. I literately know nothing of what makes a person Jewish. People have said there is a look about the person...but I fail to recognize "the look" nor do I care to. This website has been very informative and serves as a reminder to how barbaric, inhumane, and evil some people are in this world.

(13) Adam, 16/9/2004
What a help for college students!!!!!!
This was a really big help for a college research paper. This site is the best and most thorough or the hundreds I've gone to. It is complete with headlines, Issues, and the most important, the bibliography. Thanks!!!!

(12) Anonymous, 9/3/2003
Excellent
I have been studying the holocaust and found that this website is the best i've been to. Thankyou





About the author:

Rabbi Yitzchak Berkowitz
Rabbi Yitzchak Berkovits is a leading expert on Mitzvot Bein Adam L’Chavero, the Torah’s wisdom regarding interpersonal relationships. He is presently the Dean of the Center for Jewish Values, an international organization which promotes Mitzvot Bein Adam L’Chavero.


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