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4/16/2015 3:33 pm  #1


Holocaust Remembrance Day

The date marks the beginning of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

The calendar year is full of dates that could be chosen for Holocaust Remembrance Day. Some, like January 27, the day of the liberation of Auschwitz, are recognized internationally. And, as Allied forces moved through Europe liberating Nazi death camps throughout early 1945, those dates continue to amass. So why is this Thursday, April 16, marked as Holocaust Remembrance Day in the United States and elsewhere?

As the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum explains, the date corresponds with the 27th of Nisan on the Hebrew calendar, which in 1943 — on April 19 in the Western calendar — marked the beginning of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Though the date may appear to move around from year to year, it’s always on that anniversary.

The once-vibrant Jewish community of Warsaw was forced into a ghetto on the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur in 1940, stuffed into an area scarcely bigger than a square mile, deprived and diminished and finally deported, as TIME’s Lance Morrow explained in a review of a 2002 book of eyewitness accounts of the infamous ghetto. As the population of the ghetto dwindled, some who remained began to organize for combat. On April 19, 1943, as the Jewish holiday of Passover approached, Nazi forces entered the ghetto with the intention of sending all of its remaining residents to camps — only to encounter the uprising. The Jews of Warsaw managed to fight back for weeks.

It would take years before the Nazi forces were finally suppressed in Warsaw and elsewhere, but the uprising was nearly immediately a touchstone for remembrance. By 1948, on the fifth anniversary, TIME reported on one such memorial:

Last week, on the fifth anniversary of the ghetto uprising, 12,000 Jews assembled on the spot where the first shots were fired. There they dedicated a monument to the heroes of the ghetto and to the 3,500,000 other Jews killed in Poland.
Delegations of Jews from 20 nations, including the U.S., laid wreaths and banners against the monument—a wall built of broken bricks from the ghetto‘s rubble piles. Mounted in a front niche was a bronze plaque showing armed men & women straining toward freedom.
These were moving symbols to the Jews of Warsaw. But what they liked best, perhaps, was the shining granite that sheathed the monument’s wall: it was some of the Swedish granite that Adolf Hitler had ordered for his monument in Berlin.


http://time.com/3813714/holocaust-remembrance-day-warsaw/


We live in a time in which decent and otherwise sensible people are surrendering too easily to the hectoring of morons or extremists. 
 

4/17/2015 9:53 am  #2


Re: Holocaust Remembrance Day

If you ever visit Washington, DC the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is an
absolute must visit. It’s a self-guided tour that easily takes a few hours. The shoe display
that holds thousands of shoes taken before people were gassed! Is so chilling to see!
It’s hard to believe the horror that occurred! During the season you need a pass to enter the memorial.
 
From the web site:
 
March through August: To prevent crowding during the busy season, the Museum distributes free timed passes for visits to the Permanent Exhibition during the months of March through August. These passes are available at the Museum on the day of your visit or online in advance (external link)passes for the 2015 season are available online beginning October 1, 2014, at 8 p.m. Eastern Time. The passes are printed with a one-hour time range, during which you may enter the Permanent Exhibition; passes are not valid for entry after that time. The earliest pass time for entry is 10–11 a.m. and the latest is 3:30–4:30 p.m. 
 



 


 “We hold these truths to be self-evident,”  former vice president Biden said during a campaign event in Texas on Monday. "All men and women created by — you know, you know, the thing.”

 
 

4/20/2015 7:07 pm  #3


Re: Holocaust Remembrance Day

I was so deeply moved by that museum that I had to stop and get outside for some air before continuing. It is THAT powerful.


We live in a time in which decent and otherwise sensible people are surrendering too easily to the hectoring of morons or extremists. 
     Thread Starter
 

4/20/2015 9:21 pm  #4


Re: Holocaust Remembrance Day

I was there shortly after opening and it is really an emotional experience.

 

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