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Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day

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Title: Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day


1
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  • Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day

2
Yom HaShoah Program
  • Overview of the Holocaust
  • Development of Yom HaShoah
  • Exploring Gevurah Heroism
  • Faces of Heroism
  • Jewish Resistance
  • Righteous Gentiles
  • Standing up for what is right
  • Lighting of memorial candles
  • El Malei Rachamim
  • Hatikvah

3
Holocaust Overview
  • The Holocaust was the systematic, state-sponsored
    persecution and murder of approximately six
    million Jews by the Nazi regime
  • The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in
    January 1933, believed that Germans were
    "racially superior" and that the Jews, deemed
    "inferior," were an alien threat to the so-called
    German racial community
  • Most European Jews lived in countries that Nazi
    Germany would occupy or influence during World
    War II
  • By 1945, the Germans and their collaborators
    killed nearly two out of every three European
    Jews as part of the "Final Solution," the Nazi
    policy to murder the Jews of Europe

4
Holocaust Overview
  • Between 1941 and 1944, Nazi German authorities
    deported millions of Jews from Germany, from
    occupied territories, and from the countries of
    many of its Axis allies to ghettos, concentration
    camps, and to killing centers often called
    extermination camps
  • The Germans and their collaborators killed as
    many as 1.5 million children, including over a
    million Jewish children and tens of thousands of
    Romani children, German children with physical
    and mental disabilities living in institutions,
    Polish children, and children residing in the
    occupied Soviet Union

5
Development of Yom HaShoah
  • In 1951, just a few years after the Holocaust,
    the Knesset proposed creating a day of
    remembrance on the twenty-seventh of Nissan
  • On this day, Jews would remember the death of six
    million people and pay tribute to the heroes who
    tried helping the Jews
  • This day would be called Yom haShoah uMered
    haGetaot, Holocaust and Ghetto Uprising
    Remembrance Day.
  • The date was chosen because of its proximity to
    the date of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, as well
    as other tragedies during the war

6
Development of Yom Hashoah
  • Ten years later, in 1961, the Knesset passed laws
    defining the customs of the day a two minute
    nationwide silence, assemblies and ceremonies,
    lowering flags to half-mast, radio broadcasts
    focusing exclusively on Holocaust themes, and
    closing all places of entertainment.
  • Other customs include the study of Torah, the
    recitation of Kaddish and El Maleh Rachamim, and
    programs to bring people back to religion

7
Development of Yom Hashoah
  • A name change also took place changing it from
    remembering the Warsaw uprising to remembering
    all of heroism. We have to remember that not all
    of Europe were evil and there was the need to
    honour those who helped the Jews.
  • This day would now be called Yom haShoah
    veHagevurah, Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance
    Day.

8
????? - Heroism
  • Resistance to the Nazis took many forms
  • Military
  • Spiritual
  • Civic
  • Both Jews and non-Jews displayed bravery and
    heroism in resisting the Nazis.
  • Non-Jews who resisted are called Righteous
    Gentiles - ????? ????? ?????

9
????? - Heroism
  • The term Righteous Gentiles is a term of honour
    used by the State of Israel to describe non-Jews
    who risked their lives during the Holocaust to
    save Jews from extermination by the Nazis.
  • As of 1 January 2011, 23,788 men and women from
    45 countries have been recognized as Righteous
    among the Nations, representing over 10,000
    authenticated rescue stories.

10
?????
  • Jewish Resistance

11
Janusz Korczak
  • Janusz was a very successful physician, and
    children books authorand even had his on radio
    show.
  • Janusz was very popular by both Jews and no Jews
    living in Poland. In addition to his writing, he
    ran an orphanage with 200 Jewish children in it,
    in Poland.  The orphanage was in the Warsaw
    Ghetto.
  • Because of his fame, he was offered many
    different times by Polish authorities to escape
    from Nazi-occupied Europe. He refused the offer,
    and continued his work with the orphanage.
  • He walked with his children to the Treblinka
    concentration camp where he and all of the 200
    children where murdered.

12
Chana Senesh
  • Hannah was born to a Hungarian Jewish family in
    1921and was executed by the Nazis in 1944 at a
    young age of 23.
  • Prior to the war, in 1939 Hanna Senesh emigrated
    to Palestine to studied agriculture
  • When Hannah heard about the Jews in Europe being
    placed in concentration camps, she went to
    Britain and offered to serve to fighting against.
  • In 1943 Hanna joined the British Army and
    volunteered to be parachuted into Europe  She was
    captured soon after parachuting in.
  • Hanna wrote famous poems, the best known poem
    Eli, Eli (my God, my God.) 

13
Rabbi Klonymus Kalman Shapira
  • The rebbe of the Warsaw Ghetto
  • Also known as the Piaseztner Rebbe
  • Well known for writing, Aish Kodesh - Holy Fire,
    which he wrote this while in the Warsaw Ghetto
    from 1940-1942
  • He also ran a secret synagogue in the Warsaw
    Ghetto. In the synagogue he arranged mikveh
    immersions and kosher marriages
  • Inspired people to keep faith in Hashem
  • Murdered on November 3, 1943 by Nazis, in
    Trawlinki

14
Mordechai Anielewicz
  • Leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
  • He was a leader and organizer since he was young
  • Prior to 1940, he was a professional underground
    activist
  • When the major deportation to the death camps
    began in 1943, Mordechai helped organize the
    resistance to the Nazis, and for 12 weeks, a
    small group of fighters fought off the Nazis.
  • On May 8, he was killed in his bunker.
  • In Israel today, a kibbutz Yad Mordechai is
    named in his memory.

15
?????
  • Righteous Gentiles

16
Irena Sendler
  • Saved more than 2,500 children during WWII
  • Working as a tradesman in the Warsaw Ghetto,
    Irena managed over time to smuggle many children
    out of the Ghetto
  • These children were placed with Polish families,
    orphanages and convents
  • She buried lists of their real names in jars in
    order to keep track of their original and new
    identities.
  • She was caught and beaten severely
  • After the war, she dug up the jars and attempted
    to find the children and return them to their
    parents. However, almost all of their parents
    had been killed at the Treblinka extermination
    camp or had otherwise gone missing
  • Passed away in 2008

17
Raoul Wallenberg
  • A Swedish diplomat who worked in Budapest,
    Hungary, during World War II to rescue Jews from
    the Holocaust. Between July and December 1944, he
    issued protective passports and housed Jews in
    buildings established as Swedish territory,
    saving tens of thousands of lives
  • When Soviet forces liberated Budapest in February
    1945, more than 100,000 Jews remained, mostly
    because of the efforts of Wallenberg and his
    colleagues.
  • When the Soviets entered Budapest, he was called
    into detention he was never seen form again

18
Chiune Sugihara
  • Sugihara served as a Consul General of Japan in
    Prague, Czechoslovakia, from March 1941 to late
    1942.
  • During world war 2, he helped several thousand
    Jews leave the country by issuing transit visas
    to Jewish refugees so that they could travel to
    Japan who were mostly refugees from German Poland
    and Lithuania
  • Chuine Sugihara helped 6,000 Jewish refugees go
    to the to Japanese territory
  • In 1985, Israel honored him as Righteous among
    the nations for his actions.

19
Oskar Schindler
  • Schindler employed Jewish workers who resided in
    the nearby Krakow ghetto. At its high point in
    1944, he employed 1,700 workers at least 1,000
    were Jewish forced laborers, whom the Germans had
    relocated from the Krakow ghetto
  • Although the prisoners at his factory were still
    subject to the brutal conditions of the Plaszow
    concentration camp, Schindler intervened
    repeatedly on their behalf, through bribes and
    personal diplomacy to ensure, until late 1944,
    that the SS did not deport his Jewish workers
  • Schindler died in Germany, penniless and almost
    unknown, in October 1974

20
"In Germany they came first for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a
Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I
didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they
came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak
up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they
came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up
because I was a Protestant. Then they came for
me, and by that time no one was left to speak
up."
  • Pastor Martin Niemöller

21
El Malei Rachamim
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