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Elie Wiesel's Speech at Buchenwald: June 5, 2009

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Zomby Woof Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 11:58 AM
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Elie Wiesel's Speech at Buchenwald: June 5, 2009
If you were not moved to tears by this deeply moving speech, then please check yourself for a pulse, or check for the presence of your soul. It is a somber reminder of the enormous responsibility we all share as human beings: We must always conquer inhumanity wherever and whenever it appears. I have attached a transcript below of Mr. Wiesel's remarks from earlier today.


http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2009/06/obama-with-elie-wiesel-at-his-side-tours-buchenwald-blasts-holocaust-deniers.html#more


Mr. President, Chancellor Merkel, Bertrand, ladies and gentlemen. As I came here today it was actually a way of coming and visit my father's grave -- but he had no grave. His grave is somewhere in the sky. This has become in those years the largest cemetery of the Jewish people.

The day he died was one of the darkest in my life. He became sick, weak, and I was there. I was there when he suffered. I was there when he asked for help, for water. I was there to receive his last words. But I was not there when he called for me, although we were in the same block; he on the upper bed and I on the lower bed. He called my name, and I was too afraid to move. All of us were. And then he died. I was there, but I was not there.

And I thought one day I will come back and speak to him, and tell him of the world that has become mine. I speak to him of times in which memory has become a sacred duty of all people of good will -- in America, where I live, or in Europe or in Germany, where you, Chancellor Merkel, are a leader with great courage and moral aspirations.

What can I tell him that the world has learned? I am not so sure. Mr. President, we have such high hopes for you because you, with your moral vision of history, will be able and compelled to change this world into a better place, where people will stop waging war -- every war is absurd and meaningless; where people will stop hating one another; where people will hate the otherness of the other rather than respect it.

But the world hasn't learned. When I was liberated in 1945, April 11, by the American army, somehow many of us were convinced that at least one lesson will have been learned -- that never again will there be war; that hatred is not an option, that racism is stupid; and the will to conquer other people's minds or territories or aspirations, that will is meaningless.

I was so hopeful. Paradoxically, I was so hopeful then. Many of us were, although we had the right to give up on humanity, to give up on culture, to give up on education, to give up on the possibility of living one's life with dignity in a world that has no place for dignity.


We rejected that possibility and we said, no, we must continue believing in a future, because the world has learned. But again, the world hasn't. Had the world learned, there would have been no Cambodia and no Rwanda and no Darfur and no Bosnia.

Will the world ever learn? I think that is why Buchenwald is so important -- as important, of course, but differently as Auschwitz. It's important because here the large -- the big camp was a kind of international community. People came there from all horizons -- political, economic, culture. The first globalization essay, experiment, were made in Buchenwald. And all that was meant to diminish the humanity of human beings.

You spoke of humanity, Mr. President. Though unto us, in those times, it was human to be inhuman. And now the world has learned, I hope. And of course this hope includes so many of what now would be your vision for the future, Mr. President. A sense of security for Israel, a sense of security for its neighbors, to bring peace in that place. The time must come. It's enough -- enough to go to cemeteries, enough to weep for oceans. It's enough. There must come a moment -- a moment of bringing people together.

And therefore we say anyone who comes here should go back with that resolution. Memory must bring people together rather than set them apart. Memories here not to sow anger in our hearts, but on the contrary, a sense of solidarity that all those who need us. What else can we do except invoke that memory so that people everywhere who say the 21st century is a century of new beginnings, filled with promise and infinite hope, and at times profound gratitude to all those who believe in our task, which is to improve the human condition.

A great man, Camus, wrote at the end of his marvelous novel, The Plague: "After all," he said, "after the tragedy, never the rest...there is more in the human being to celebrate than to denigrate." Even that can be found as truth -- painful as it is -- in Buchenwald.

Thank you, Mr. President, for allowing me to come back to my father's grave, which is still in my heart.

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leftynyc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:29 PM
Response to Original message
1. How can anyone not be touched
by this? Imagine being feet away from your father while he dies and being too afraid to hold him in your arms while he breathes his last breath. Heartbreaking.
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Zomby Woof Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:36 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. I think of how rank inhumanity was confronted every moment
By deep and profound humanity. Wiesel's words were so immediate, it was as if it happened yesterday, and in a sense, it did.
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abq e streeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:36 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. For those who are strong enough ( I no longer am),Mr. Wiesel's book, simply called NIght
is so powerful, that as I said, I no longer am a strong enough person to even read it; yet Mr.Wiesel and millions of others somehow found the strength to actually live through it; to survive it.
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leftynyc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:44 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. My nephew read it in school
when he was in the 7th grade. I wondered if he was just too young for it but he maintained he was ready and it led to some great discussions in his class.
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abq e streeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 01:01 PM
Response to Reply #5
7. I've read it to and with 7th grade classrooms
maybe it is better to start that awareness at a younger age, when to some extent, maybe it still feels somewhat like disconnected, ancient history...( although I always point out, for instance, how much Anne Frank was like them; she liked the movies and riding her bike etc, to give them a sense that its not so terribly long ago, and that these were kids that were more like them than they might have at first thought)...anyway, at that age, I think, its real enough to have a profound impact, yet maybe not enough to just tear them up inside like it does to me. I hope this didn't sound like I was denigrating the ability of young people to think and feel; I know quite well that they most certainly do; I may not have expressed what I was trying to as well as I intended...
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leftynyc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 01:09 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. You expressed it very well
Kids that age have trouble with the concept of "history". 50 years, 200 years - it's all the same to them. I think the Anne Frank analogy is perfect - someone they can relate to. Night was so emotionally draining, the kind of book you are thinking about, crying about, long after you've read the last page. I would have thought it would frighten kids that age.
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4lbs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:36 PM
Response to Original message
2. It struck me as he was talking about his father and the lack of a grave, that his father was likely
one of the ones incinerated in the ovens after he died of illness.

That's when I just about lost it.
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grantcart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 12:50 PM
Response to Original message
6. a human giant
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Rabrrrrrr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-05-09 01:37 PM
Response to Original message
9. Deeply moving, poetic, beautiful uplifting of humanity and our responsibility as a race
I read it with visions of the Republican/rightwing/fundamentalist unholy lust for a Buchenwald in every community with them working the ovens, and am so utterly proud and joyous and filled with dance to know we finally are blessed with a president who's morally tired of the republicans' sanctification of destruction and addiction to death.
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HOLOS Donating Member (390 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-09-09 03:03 PM
Response to Original message
10. Thank you, Elie and Pres. O
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