National Holocaust Museum.
In 1995, a family of devout Christians founded the National Holocaust Museum. It was a momentous period of time because across the world the global Jewish population had been heard throughout the decades. They too, would prove to be so movingly influential once again because we need to listen and absorb, digest, process thoroughly and analyse every single aspect of the Holocaust, all of those unresolved questions with very few concrete answers because none of us can ever understand the enormity of it all. As a grandson of a Holocaust survivor, I feel particularly qualified.
And so it was that the Smith family including sons Stephen and James were sufficiently inspired and energised to come up with the most magnificent idea of them all. They'd heard about the vast and extensive documentaries, the masses of information and misinformation, the lies and fallacies as well as the Holocaust survivors whose story still resounds throughout the ages. It is, as we all know, one of the most horrific, harrowing, terrifying, touching and moving story of one religion whose persecution then annihilation has continued to both polarise and unite the whole world.
And yet 81 years later we could still hear the screams of agony and purgatory, watch in incredulity vivid images of death, the rampant hatred and contempt, the evil forces of antisemitism, the blatant racism, the adults and children who were horribly humiliated before being murdered and slaughtered unbearably and disgracefully. But for one family and the mother of that family, this story was one that had to be recounted and then given us the most powerful reminder since one day our children and grandchildren may think that the Holocaust is no longer as relevant or accessible.as it should be. They will know much more though and that may be the decisive breakthrough in any historical reference to the Holocaust.
But this is my testimony and you know for a fact the next generation, our generation will know exactly where we're coming from. They will be furnished with a rich understanding and knowledge of the vicious manslaughter, the barbaric brutality, the callous indifference to death, pain, suffering and murder. There is a sense here that none of us can truly know what happened in hindsight since your grandparents and mum were too traumatised to open up about the Holocaust. Besides, who on earth would want to hear that same familiar story? We do and so we should because we have to be sharply aware and informed. Always and indefinitely.
Yesterday my lovely wife Bev and I visited the National Holocaust Museum in Laxton, Nottinghamshire, a place of sorrow but tranquillity. reflection and rumination, of stunned silence, careful observation and plenty of private thoughts that can never be questioned. The Smith family, with the full support of mum Marina, went to Israel in 1991 on an exhaustive fact finding tour in Israel. They visited Yad Va'Shem, that special pilgrimage for not only Jews but every religion, class, background and belief. It is a location for serious investigation, a reminder once again of the sinful loss of life that some of us find it impossible to register. But of course it happened. None can deny that.
Four years later and the Smith dream became a remarkable achievement. From the beautiful city of Jerusalem in Israel to a small corner of Nottinghamshire, this had become a journey of a lifetime finally bearing fruit. In 1995, the National Holocaust Museum opened to the public and once again we joined them on a voyage of discovery that many of us had travelled on for as long as we can remember. We wandered around the museum in a state of shock, anguished astonishment, gaining an even broader picture of man's inhumanity to man.
There was the centuries old Blood Libel trials where a non Jewish academic became convinced that the Jews were responsible for all the cruelties, injustices and important events of everyday life. It now seems far distant but even then Jews were vilified, detested, doubted, spat on, alienated, ostracised and made to feel totally inferior. Way back then, the Jews were treated as pariahs, different, unique, a genuine threat to modern society for reasons that still baffle and rankle of good, decent, law abiding, honourable folk.
Then we walked through the mazy, labyrinthine roooms and eloquent spaces that told the stories that we may have listened to at some point in our lives. But, in essence, are these are the history lessons we should all explain and convey repeatedly until the message sinks in that peace is the only solution and not war. There were the traditional glass cases of exhibits, the oppression, the sinister killings, the soul destroying and egregious starvation. the taunting tortures and, of course the gas chambers.
You were suddenly confronted by the most graphic of all representations, the shop windows daubed unforgivably with Jude and the swastika scrawled in the most ugly and obscene fashion. You saw the Jews being frogmarched helplessly through the grounds of the concentration camps, the death chambers, the showers with Zyklon gas, the barbed wire authenticity, the Nazi stormtroopers in all their disgusting and revolting military uniform.
You saw the twisted anguish on the faces of children, the terrible branding on their arms and on their heads, people being thrown, pushed, prodded, forced against their will, shuffling tearfully to their death, the final judgment, a demise of which the world could only look on with repulsion and bewilderment. The rooms were heavy with the poignant voices of the heartbroken, the survivors who were left to rot and die. But they were the ones who somehow emerged into the daylight with tender love stories and lovely testimonies of redemption and salvation, of coming out on the other side and blinking into sun light and daylight.
It was a gentle wander through one of the darkest and bleakest periods of Jewish history. There was the enforced isolation and seclusion, the scraps of bread and water that constituted breakfast, lunch and tea and then the awful realisation that they were the ones who had to sacrifice everything and pay for it in death. Heads were shaven, bodies now wracked with convulsions of pain, hurt, constant discomfort and young children were being beaten savagely. Of course we have seen it before and the Smith family whose concept it was to educate and inform those whose curiosity was perfectly understandable, are here to show us all the visual evidence we need.
The National Holocaust Museum in Laxton, near Nottinghamshire has now been opened for over 35 years and the public, yearning desperately for yet even greater enlightenment, are even clearer. We all know by now the story of the Holocaust because it is imperative that not only Britain but the rest of the world should be given the ultimate history lesson of all lifetime. Of course there is a disturbing body of scepticism whereby the deniers just insist that the Holocaust never happened or if it did then the numbers were hugely exaggerated. We must ignore them because they are the dangerous ones.
Once again there were the distortions and mockeries of the Jewish stereotype, centuries long ago. There was the Dickensian caricature of Fagin, the grasping, greedy and avaricious Jewiish moneylenders, Shakespeare's notorious Shylock, a nasty piece or work, a skinflint of the highest order, frugal and prudent as they come. Jews have always been on the sharp end of abuse, jealousy and resentment and even now the song has never changed.
At the moment Israel, Eretz Israel, our stunning jewel in the crown, have become the victims of shocking circumstances, Iran, now their target for complete destruction. Even Donald Trump's USA have vented their spleen and with every justification.. Israel have now faced down Hezbollah and Hamas with admirable persistence. The lovely Jewish people will always have their right to exist in perfect harmony and without a single bone of malice in their heart. And yesterday was the case in point, a confirmation of everything we've ever known and researched about the Holocaust.
The Smith family whose brainchild this National Holocaust Museum was,,should never be overlooked in the pages and chapters of an often troubled and yet victorious Jewish history. We owe them an enormous debt of gratitude and we would shake their hands most vigorously if we were to ever meet them in the street for with them we know with a heart warming assurance, that the facts are out there and, more importantly, the truth.