by Dr. Haim Shine
The Passover holiday, Holocaust
Remembrance Day, Memorial Day for Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism, and
Independence Day are benchmarks on the Jewish calendar. The proximity of the
dates is not a coincidence, but carries profound meaning worth
examining.
In Jewish history, Passover
symbolizes the exodus from Egypt, from bondage to freedom. A group of Hebrews,
3,327 years ago, decided they were a nation and began marching on the path to
liberation. It was a long and arduous road. The agony of winning liberty is
often harder than the horror of slavery. During a long 40-year march through the
desert, a generation of Hebrews who left Egypt died and passed from the world,
kept from entering the Land of Israel. Those who witnessed God's miracles on the
banks of the Red Sea, heard His voice on Mount Sinai, and received heavenly
sustenance could not cope with the tasks of an independent entity requiring
supreme responsibility and personal sacrifice. Hundreds of years of sovereignty
ended with a 2,000-year exile in the Diaspora.
Holocaust Remembrance Day is a
painful historic summary of the tribulations in exile. Destruction, blood
libels, expulsions, crusades, inquisitions, and finally the attempt to implement
the final solution to the Jewish problem. In the 20th century, a third of our
people were slaughtered in a variety of ways. Only a fraction remained of the
most ancient people on Earth. Through an inexplicable miracle, this nation rose
from the ashes and valleys of death, breathed new life and again began to march.
Ghosts of the past rose from their graves to point the way to the ancient
homeland. The remaining survivors made their way to Zion, in rickety smuggling
boats. Many drowned on the way. Great Britain, the empire of the day and the
champion of hypocrisy, blocked them from entering Israel. The miracle of
resurrection after the Holocaust is so great that the human spirit has yet to
understand and internalize it.
Memorial Day for Fallen Soldiers and
Victims of Terrorism reminds every single Israeli of the price of freedom. More
than 23,000 fallen have sacrificed their lives on the altar of national
resurrection in the country's wars and battles. It is an incomprehensible
number. The military cemeteries across the country are full of lives cut short,
leaving only their memories behind. About half of my comrades from our tank
officers' training course paid with their lives in the Yom Kippur War. I look at
our yearbook and see the smiles, along with the dashed hopes and dreams.
Generations of Jews, wiped out forever.
Independence Day is the loftiest
expression of our resurrection in the Land of Israel. A small gathering of
600,000 Jews stood courageously against the combined Arab armies and defeated
them. There is no other country on the planet, the same age as us and with the
same achievements. It is a country that in a short period of time succeeded to
establish a military, industrial and educational global power. We have reason to
feel pride and joy. We were able to witness, in the generation of the Holocaust
and revival, the realization of an ancient dream.
Dr. Haim Shine
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8131
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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