Reflections on Holocaust
Mike
Ghouse, January 15, 2008
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AUSCHWITZ |
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MACABRE |
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GERMANY
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BOSNIA |
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DARFUR |
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CONGO |
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GAZA |
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GUJARAT |
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HADITA |
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KASHMIR
PANDITS |
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RAFA |
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RWANDA |
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SRI
LANKA |
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NANKING
MASSACRE |
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ARMENIA
HOLOCAUST |
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SABRA |
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KURDS |
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The United Nations has designated January 27th as the
Holocaust Remembrance Day. On this day, in behalf of
the Foundation for Pluralism and the World Muslim
Congress, I request us to reflect upon the human
sufferings inflicted by humans through out the world.
We may start out by scribbling a title for each one of
the small and large injustice we have witnessed or
learned through news. What did we do with that
information and how did we feel about ourselves? The
conflicts emanating from injustices are rife in Congo,
Darfur, Sri Lanka, Iraq, Israel, Palestine, Pakistan
and other places. Please take a moment to reflect upon
the viciousness of the humans, the vulgarity of the
few that has engulfed the innocent bystanders. We have
to work towards the idea of “saving a life is like
saving the whole humanity,” says God in Torah and
Qur’aan. You and I exist because someone believed in
it before us.
Six Million Jews were brutally murdered simply because
of their faith. Imagine if we were in that situation,
ruthlessly packed in a rail car along with 100 other
humans to be thrown in gas chambers. The helplessness
and the humiliation should have been palpable, but the
world stood by silently finding bliss in self designed
ignorance. If it happens to us we feel like tearing
the world apart.
The world reacted belatedly, thank God; the evil plan
of the Nazis did not materialize. We said, never again
and we keep falling short on our own promise. It is
time to reflect if our hearts can feel the pain and if
our minds can do something about it. We should visit
the holocaust museum in our area; it will upload
humanity into us, it is good to be a human again and
again.
Our
hearts and minds are endowed with a sense of justice,
and whenever we see that balance disturbed, we react
to it with anger, helplessness and distress. Religion
and common sense have taught us to regain that balance
by taking an action, least of which is to speak up.
Our minds work mysteriously, the act of seeking
balance and justice relieves us from the anguish and
gives us a sense purpose in life that we stand for
something.
If my actions and words aggravate a conflict, then I
have become a contributor toward chaos, on the other
hand if my words and actions mitigate the conflict, I
become a peace maker. Peace has got to be
unconditional without any score keeping, “do your duty
without the greed of results”, says the Bhagvad Gita.
No one is an island; we have to develop an open mind
and an open heart towards each other in the process of
healing and repairing the world. We should short
change our humanness by thinking that we were not
responsible for it.
We should honor our divine instructions to demur and
honor the suffering of others. It will be a day for
all of us to reflect upon and promise ourselves "never
again" and hope each one of us makes a commitment to
oneself to speak out against any injustice.
If we can learn to accept and respect the God given
uniqueness of each one of the 7 billion of us, then
conflicts fade and solutions emerge. The healing and
recovery for Humanity can only occur when we each
examine our own hearts, our own cultures and our own
faith traditions to discern where seeds of prejudice,
cruelty and even genocide remain hidden.
A Good deed is creating peace, security and balance
for all creation. The wisdom of Bible is crystal clear
“do unto others as you would want others to do to
you”. Indeed, that is essence of all religions.
This is an invitation to people of all backgrounds to
reflect upon the tragedies humans
have endured, and bring about a change, however little
we can. The
least we can do is
to speak up whenever we see injustice or words and
actions that promote chaos.
In 2006, the United Nations proclaimed January 27th as
a Holocaust remembrance day to commemorate the worst
atrocity the world had ever witnessed. In support of
that, the Foundation for Pluralism and the World
Muslim Congress organized an event on Thursday,
January 26, 2006 to accommodate the Jewish Sabbath as
January 27 fell on a Friday in 2006. For more
information please visit:
http://www.foundationforpluralism.com/Images_HolocaustDay/HMD2006_ProgramReport.asp
I request you to pray
and mourn for the massacres and deaths of all human
beings. I beg you to forgive me if I have missed a
tragedy that you are familiar with. I admire you if
you could send me a 100 word description or a link
from a news paper to be included in the comments.
If you felt sorrow for
some and not for the others, please check out your
peace meter for your bias and prejudices against
groups, nations, ethnicities, religions, cultures or
races. Higher the prejudice lesser the peace and vice
versa.
You can increase your
peace and happiness by repenting in your solitude for
your biases and see the meter start rising, and when
you actually do not feel any bias toward any human,
see the mercury miracles. Finally if you can volunteer
one hour a week for people you don't know or you did
not like in the past, you can be the happiest person
on the earth. God guarantees that and I will
underwrite it. Ha! Try it, it is effortless and won't
cost you a dime but gain you happiness.
May God help us become
prejudice free,
May God give us the
guts to speak up when we see wrongs,
May God remove
arrogance from us and
May God bless us with
the humanness to feel the pain and sorrow of others.
Please pray (wish it,
if you are an atheist) and invoke the goodness in each
one of us.