AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Never again, again: the Holocaust Museum and 9/11.(At War II)

National Review

| December 08, 2003 | Bennett, William J. | COPYRIGHT 2003 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

AT a recent "Days of Remembrance" event at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., Elie Wiesel said, "Memory is tragedy's most indispensable element." No modern evil compares to the Holocaust, and the Holocaust Museum--along with the preservation of the Holocaust's memory--has taught much. Its ten-year anniversary this year is to be celebrated.

The Holocaust Museum succeeds in its mission by showing one grim, discouraging, horrible picture after another. To go through the museum is to see the center of Hell. It is neither an uplifting nor an encouraging experience, but, better, especially for our times, it is a deepening one. In a world where a majority of images speed by us and are forgotten, such deepening experiences--even into the heart of darkness--are indispensable for memory, perspective, and action. It is an irony of our time that, while many advocate the personal expression of any and all emotions and feelings, we are squeamish about telling the stories of human atrocity. Why should such hesitancy govern when allowing it to do so leads to amnesia and loss of will?

A tragedy forgotten is a tragedy that happened only to a direct victim. A tragedy remembered is a tragedy that teaches all of us lessons: that we cannot sit idly by as our brothers' blood is shed; that what happened as a result of the indolence of the decent should never happen again. "Never again" is the main lesson we have learned from the Holocaust--never again would we allow human beings to be slaughtered when we could have prevented it; never again would we sit silently while we knew slaughter was taking place. Another lesson: If tragedy can be prevented before it happens, prevent it. If Hitler could have been stopped in 1928, or 1938, the world would have forgiven such action--or so one would hope. It is a human duty to remember humanity, to remember that other human beings shall not be treated like animals and slaughtered, that tyrants shall not be allowed to act like gods, choosing who shall live and who shall die.

That tyrants and terrorists today may be Arabs and Muslims--and not Germans--is no reason to be less concerned about the intolerable. So let us remember what terrorists have done to us, and to human beings everywhere. Let us erect a museum to commemorate September 11 and its aftermath so that we do not forget what happened that day, what could happen again, and what was happening in the Middle East and Afghanistan before we responded. We need such a museum today so that foolish and dangerous comments like Michael Moore's--"There is no terrorist threat"--do not become the coin of the realm in thought, conversation, and indifference.

That museum need not be elaborate, nor need it be confined to one location. Let it be put on CD-ROM, DVD, and VHS. And let the media announce that they are going to show these atrocities, and let them then be shown. In fact, the media should make time in their otherwise anodyne lineups for such true reality shows. There have been complaints of late that the Pentagon is enforcing a ban on displaying military caskets. That ban should be lifted, but only so long as the unspoken ban on the footage of what led to this war is also lifted. That footage should be aired late at night, without graphic promotional video. There should be warnings about the content: Parents should make sure that their younger children are out of the room, and should talk with their older children before watching it with them.

The first images of the museum should be of the airplanes flying into the Twin Towers. Then, with slight alterations to preserve anonymity, there should follow footage of the estimated 200 people who jumped from the towers. We should watch their seemingly eternal, yet ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Never Too Late to Remember: The Politics Behind New York's Holocaust Museum.
Magazine article from: The Review of Politics Marquis, Alice Goldfarb March 22, 1998 700+ words
...Memorial to the Holocaust - Museum of Jewish...nobody in New York wanted...institution in New York as well as Washington's Holocaust Museum may pass...became in New York. Time and...tower atop a Holocaust Museum. Even the...
Holocaust Museum's Expansion in the Works in New York.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News October 8, 2002 700+ words
By Eric Herman, Daily News, New York Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News...Memorial to the Holocaust, called the Holocaust Museum for short, is one year into a $60...NYDailyNews.com (c) 2002, Daily News, New York. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune...
Never Too Late to Remember: The Politics Behind New York City's Holocaust...
Magazine article from: Booklist Cohen, George September 15, 1996 700+ words
In October 1994, ground was broken for a Holocaust museum in New York City. In October 1947, a similar ceremony was supposed to result in a Holocaust memorial. The reasons for this 47-year delay...
Holocaust Museum result of years of dedication. (A Living Memorial to the...
Magazine article from: Real Estate Weekly Weiss, Lois December 7, 1994 700+ words
...Living Memorial to the Holocaust - Museum of Jewish Heritage...Living Memorial to the Holocaust - Museum of Jewish Heritage...museum should be in New York. Then-president...of the developers in New York were on the commission...
Detroit-Area Rabbi Leads Effort to Raise $14 Million for New Holocaust Museum.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News September 25, 2002 700+ words
...million to complete a new Holocaust museum in Farmington Hills...A few examples: In New York, the Museum of Jewish...the Jewish Museum in New York City in which artists...first stand-alone Holocaust museum in the country and...
Security a constant worry for Holocaust museum.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire June 12, 2009 700+ words
...and the FBI. Officials at the Holocaust museum won't be more specific about...most secure, but he did say the Holocaust museum is "exceptionally protected...prevent copycat attacks. In New York City, police dispatched counterterrorism...
Security a constant worry for US Holocaust museum.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire June 12, 2009 700+ words
...and the FBI. Officials at the Holocaust museum won't be more specific about...most secure, but he did say the Holocaust museum is "exceptionally protected...prevent copycat attacks. In New York City, police dispatched counterterrorism...
Holocaust Museum Founder Marks Arson Fire.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire October 12, 2004 700+ words
(From AP Online) Byline: DEANNA WRENN A Holocaust museum created here in 1995 and then burned to the ground last...rebuild came in from as far away as Israel, London and New York, but Indiana residents also chipped in. Kor said local...
Founder of Holocaust museum in Indiana celebrates ground breaking one year...
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire October 12, 2004 700+ words
(From AP Worldstream) Byline: DEANNA WRENN A Holocaust museum created here in 1995 and then burned to the ground last...rebuild came in from as far away as Israel, London and New York, but Indiana residents also chipped in. Kor said local...
Blood shed at crowded Holocaust museum in US.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire June 11, 2009 700+ words
...in the Navy for about 14 years, worked in advertising in New York City and moved to Maryland, near Washington, in the late...American institution is more important to this effort than the Holocaust Museum, and no act of violence will diminish our determination...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, Never again, again: the Holocaust Museum and 9/11.(At War II)

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA