Stand Tall and Proud
August 30, 2004
Almost exactly sixty five years ago, Nazi forces conquered and occupied
the second largest city in Poland, Lodz. Less than a week after the occupation,
Rosh HaShana 1939, the Germans ordered that all businesses remain open and that
synagogues be closed. This was only the beginning of the havoc to be wreaked on
Lodz’s two hundred and thirty thousand Jews.
In November Jews were ordered to wear a yellow arm-band, easily identifying
them as enemies of the third reich. A month later the arm-bands were replaced
by the infamous yellow badge in the shape of a star of David.
In February, 1940 the Nazis officially announced the creation of the
Lodz Ghetto. On May first the fenced-off ghetto was closed. Two hundred and
thirty thousand people were squeezed into less than five square kilometers. The
ghetto was sealed, and so was the fate of its inhabitants.
Two years later the Germans transported another twenty thousand Jews to
the Lodz ghetto, together with five thousand gypsies.
In early January 1942, the Germans began a transport of all Jews under
the age of 10 and over the age of 65 to the first Nazi extermination camp,
Chelmno, only about 65 kilometers from Lodz. A Nazi-appointed Jew, Mordechai
Haim Rumkowski, head of the Lodz ghetto Judenrat, or council, made a famous
speech:
"A grievous blow has struck the ghetto. They are asking us to
give up the best we possess - the children and the elderly. I was unworthy of
having a child of my own, so I gave the best years of my life to children. I've
lived and breathed with children, I never imagined I would be forced to deliver
this sacrifice to the altar with my own hands. In my old age, I must stretch
out my hands and beg: Brothers and sisters! Hand them over to me! Fathers and
mothers: Give me your children…I must perform this difficult and bloody
operation - I must cut off limbs in order to save the body itself. I must take
children because, if not, others may be taken as well - God forbid…I must tell
you a secret: they requested 24,000 victims, 3000 a day for eight days. I
succeeded in reducing the number to 20,000, but only on the condition that
these be children under the age of 10. Children 10 and older are safe! Since
the children and the aged together equals only some 13,000 souls, the gap will
have to be filled with the sick.
I can barely speak. I am exhausted; I only want to tell you what I am asking of you: Help me carry out this action! I am trembling. I am afraid that others, God forbid, will do it themselves .
A broken Jew stands before you. Do not envy me. This is the most difficult of all orders I have ever had to carry out at any time. I reach out to you with my broken, trembling hands and beg: Give into my hands the victims! So that we can avoid having further victims, and a population of 100,000 Jews can be preserved! So, they promised me: If we deliver our victims by ourselves, there will be peace!!!
I can barely speak. I am exhausted; I only want to tell you what I am asking of you: Help me carry out this action! I am trembling. I am afraid that others, God forbid, will do it themselves .
A broken Jew stands before you. Do not envy me. This is the most difficult of all orders I have ever had to carry out at any time. I reach out to you with my broken, trembling hands and beg: Give into my hands the victims! So that we can avoid having further victims, and a population of 100,000 Jews can be preserved! So, they promised me: If we deliver our victims by ourselves, there will be peace!!!
The parents dressed their children in their holiday best, as if they
were about to attend a party. The children were then separated from their parents
and transported to Chelmno. As the train pulled out of the station, filled with
babies and the elderly, the cry “Mama’ could be heard from inside the cars. In
less than two weeks, over 20,000 Jews were sent to their deaths at Chelmno.
Regarding Rumkowski, who was killed at Aushwitz in 1944, according to
the Simon Wiesenthal Center: Within the ghetto, Rumkowski had
gradually overcome opposition with the aid of German intervention and by
introducing an evenhanded system of food distribution. Ultimately, he ruled
with an iron hand. The few who dared to oppose him, ran the risk of his taking
revenge, which in some extreme instances meant being included on the lists of
candidates for deportation. His figure more than that of any other Jewish
leader, has attracted the attention of historians and writers. In the view of
some, Rumkowski was a traitor and a collaborator. Others believe
that his policies helped extend the life span of the Lodz
ghetto, which remained in existence when all the other ghettos
in Poland
had been liquidated. Those who hold the latter opinion point out that the five
thousand to seven thousand survivors of the Lodz
ghetto constituted, in relative terms, the largest among all the groups of Holocaust
survivors in Poland.
The Lodz ghetto was liquidated in August, 1944 and the Soviets liberated
the area in January of 1945. Of the over 250,000 Jews living in the ghetto,
less than 900 remained. [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/lodz.html]
and [http://www.datasync.com/~davidg59/rumkowsk.html]
That’s the way it was then.
Yesterday, Jews and gentiles gathered in Lodz to mark the 60th
anniversary of the ghetto’s destruction. Among those there, Israeli science and
technology minister Ilan Shalgi, Polish prime minister Marek Belka and Lodz
mayor Jerzy Kropiwnicki. The ceremony, at the Lodz cemetery, was followed by a
march to the Lodz train station, infamous site of Jewish transports to
concentration camps.
It’s very important to remember what happened sixty years ago – in Lodz,
in Aushwitz, and throughout Europe. The other night, while attending a wedding
ceremony in Jerusalem, I had the honor and privilege to meet a man, who in my
eyes, is a giant. In truth, I know very little about Rabbi Haim Menachem
Teichtel. My guess is that he is over 80 years old – he was born in Hungary,
and was fortunate to escape the flames of the holocaust. So, not knowing him,
how can I call him a giant? Simply, because I know of his father. And with a
father like his, he too has to be a Jew of gigantic proportions.
Rabbi Haim Menachem’s father was named Rabbi Yisachar Shlomo Teichtel. A
supremely talented scholar, the very pious Rabbi Teichtel believed, along with
other religious Hungarian Jews in the pre-1940s, that Zionism was an evil disease,
to be kept at a distance.
As World War Two progressed, Hungary’s Jews witnessed what was happening
to their Jewish brethren throughout Europe. However, they thought it couldn’t
happen to them. Rabbi Teichtel, with his brilliant mind and his unbelievable
spirituality, realized otherwise. Analyzing the situation at hand, Rabbi
Teichel came to an unavoidable conclusion: had Jews seen the handwriting on the
wall and moved to Israel, in keeping with the goals of Zionism, the calamitous
events plaguing them would not have occurred. He rejected his previous life’s
philosophy which stated that Jews should not move to Eretz Yisrael and decided
to repent, for what he viewed as a terrible sin.
Rabbi Teichtel, being trapped in Budapest, decided that his repentance
would take the form of a book, which he titled “Em Habanim Smacha,” which
literally means, the Mother of the Sons is Happy. The entire work, quoting
hundreds of Jewish texts and scholars from memory, is dedicated to an
appreciation of Eretz Yisrael, including the many reasons why Jews should live
in their land, the Land of Israel. The book is a tremendous source of praise
for the land, and bears witness to its author’s humility – a giant Torah
scholar who rejected his earlier beliefs, announced his change of heart
publicly and wrote a classic Torah volume to convince others of the rightness
of his ways.
Rabbi Yisachar Shlomo Teichtel’s family escaped the horrors of Aushwitz,
but the Rabbi was not so fortunate. He survived the camps only to be killed
days before the end of the war by a Ukrainian while attempting to prevent the barbarian
from stealing a piece of bread from a woman.
So, where does this all lead? If we are to learn from the past, we
should recognize, for the nth time, that appeasement does not work. I cannot
evaluate the deeds of Mordechai Haim Rumkowski – I certainly do not know if,
when reaching the next world, he was judged as a traitor or a hero. But his premise,
saving the many by sacrificing the few, was already tried, only a few years
earlier, by then British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. So why try again?
From Rabbi Teichtel we can learn many things – but first of all, not to
ignore the obvious, the events taking place around you. Putting on blinds,
saying, “it won’t happen to me,” is a sure recipe for defeat. That’s what
happened to Hungarian Judaism, at the cost of more than a half a million
killed, over 60 percent of the Hungarian Jewish population, obliterated in the
course of one year.
One last example that I feel obligated to mention. Last night the IDF
again destroyed the Hazon David synagogue, as well as the small, makeshift camp
at the site of the Hebron Heroes neighborhood, between Hebron and Kiryat Arba.
How paradoxical that these two quintessential sites, one a place of worship in
memory of two murdered men, and the other, the seeds of a neighborhood in
memory of 9 soldiers and officers and three civilians, all killed by Arab
terrorists, should be again destroyed on orders of the Israeli government at
the same time that Israel, the Jewish people, and even Polish leaders,
thousands of kilometers away, commemorate the slaughter of Jews sixty years
ago. What would the martyred victims of Ghetto Ludz say if they knew that the
Jewish people, with their own hands, were destroying synagogues in Eretz
Yisrael, in Hebron, built in memory of murdered Jews?
It is so imperative that we learn from the past, but too many times we
seem to either forget or ignore, and it is such a blunder. Appeasement is fatal
mistake, and blinders do not change reality, they just screen out what you do
not want to see. If Israel really wants to honor those Jews who lived and died
in Lodz, it is not enough to attend ceremonies and make speeches. We must
collectively reject and then correct the erroneous ways of the past, adopting
the right means of action – standing tall and proud for what is legitimately, rightfully
ours, never acquiesce, when necessary take the offensive rather than hide
behind a good defense, and never, ever,
despair.
With blessings from Hebron.