Lessons from the Holocaust



Lessons from the Holocaust

With all our strength, moral and positive political influence, we must inspire people to choose their leaders carefully

We need to reflect upon ourselves, our species. We humans with reflective intelligence and knowledge of higher values must urgently strive to be better human beings. Working together, we can change the world by teaching truth and honesty, setting good examples, sharing knowledge, helping our neighbors and by virtuous living.

By sharing the values of what is just, true and right, virtuous people can live in peace with each other. If most people live a virtuous life where equality, human rights and dignity are universally respected, it can be a world at peace, with prosperity shared equally.

Jan. 27 was International Holocaust Remembrance Day marking the world's worst mass murder, the genocide of more than six million Jewish people. It happened across Europe from 1933 to 1945 when the Nazi political party came to power in Germany led by Adolf Hitler.

The Holocaust was an almost indescribable implementation of a diabolical plan to erase from the earth the Jewish people and others that the racist party under Hitler deemed to be subhuman and marked for elimination by mass execution.

Evil is the total absence of good seen through the actions of people without conscience, without moral or spiritual values, with no respect for the rights and dignity of other humans. They have no belief in what is morally right and wrong and consider themselves above any law and kill others with impunity.

As in the past, evil is with us every day. Good people of virtue must unite to defeat evil or it will defeat us. We learn of this evil by observing the present and remembering the past. In several countries today, mass murders and genocides are taking place. Blameless people are shot and murdered by agents of the state with impunity and depraved malice.

He falsely believed the German Aryan people were the supreme and purest of people and all others were branded as inferior degenerates who had to be exterminated

Six million Jews and a million more from other groups were, abused, violated and exterminated in the most heinous ways devised by evil-minded Nazis. Even today small groups of white supremacist neo-Nazi gangs racially abuse and commit acts of violence against immigrants and people of color in Europe and the United States.

The remembrance day is held to honor and uphold the dignity and memory of the millions who were brutally killed. Their human rights were stripped from them. They were arrested, robbed, abused, jailed and driven like cattle to the slaughter. They suffered greatly and died after torture or execution, with a million gassed to death in crowded gas chambers.

The Final Solution was devised by Hitler to rid Europe of the Jewish people whom he hated. His fanatical racism knew no limits. He falsely believed the German Aryan people were the supreme and purest of people and all others were branded as inferior degenerates who had to be exterminated. The industrial power of Germany was mobilized by Hitler, who was elected to power by 44 percent of the vote and had a strong following. Yet millions of good Germans rejected him and opposed his regime.

The Nazis built 25 concentration and execution camps all over occupied Europe and in Germany for their evil purpose. Auschwitz is known as the most notorious. At least one million Jews were gassed or beaten or shot to death at this camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

In other camps, the killings went on. Between 870,000 and 925,000 people were killed at Treblinka in Poland; 170,000 died at Sobibor. At least 152,000 were murdered at Chelmno, and about 434,500 were killed at Belzec. Almost all were in occupied Poland.

Dutch teenager Anne Frank was imprisoned in Bergen-Belsen camp and died of sickness just before the liberation. Her famous diary tells of her life in hiding and in the camp.

In Germany, a notorious Nazi camp was Buchenwald, about 25 kilometers outside the famous cultural city of Weimar. It had prisoners from all over Europe. They were all considered degenerate, useless and used for slave labor in armament factories before being executed.

There, I saw huge photographs of piles of some 200 emaciated dead bodies piled on top of each other like a human garbage dump

After receiving the Human Rights Award of the City of Weimar in 2000, I was taken to the Buchenwald camp and given the privilege to lay a wreath of flowers on a memorial slab that honors the 56,545 victims killed there by the Nazis. As many as 208,000 were held in this camp and in sub-camps.

I saw the tiny cell where important prisoners were held before being taken to the execution chamber in the corner of the camp. There, I saw huge photographs of piles of some 200 emaciated dead bodies piled on top of each other like a human garbage dump.

In the execution chamber, the prisoner was made to stand against the wall and behind him was a hole in the wall through which he was shot in the back of the head. There were hooks in the roof from which other prisoners were strung up with wire around their necks until they died of strangulation.

A large, rusty metal lift took the bodies up one floor to the ovens. In the crematorium room, there were six furnaces in a row. They threw the bodies on a trolley and shoved them into the long oven. They locked the metal door and incinerated the bodies of the murdered victims. The executions and murders went on all day. Other prisoners had to do the incineration while the Nazi SS officer was the executioner.

This shocking and harrowing experience of my visit to Buchenwald has stayed with me. This camp and others stand today as historical evidence and a stark reminder that however developed, cultured, educated and technologically advanced and prosperous a nation is, it can allow a racially motivated, hate-filled politician to come to power, murder millions and destroy the nation. After Hitler's suicide and the end of World War II, Germany was devastated.

With all our strength, moral and positive political influence, we must educate and inspire people to choose their leaders carefully. The good leaders are those with compassion, kindness, understanding, integrity, goodness and a love of justice and truth. This is the leader that can lead a nation away from the culture of greed, selfishness, killing and death to its noble destiny where goodness and justice will prevail with wisdom and good governance.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official editorial position of UCA News.


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