Each year there is small ceremony to mark
the event and on the 60th anniversary, there was a gathering
of dignitaries including the Prefect of the Haute Savoie , the
chief Rabbi and the deputy chief Rabbi for the area. I remarked
to the hotel owner that this was a good thing to do. To my surprise,
he demurred saying, "Yes, but what about the effect on the
present generation of Germans? They are made to feel bad because
of their past by such events and the French are encouraged to
think badly of them as well". A fair point.
We, too, have local and national remembrance
ceremonies at which dignitaries take part and where we as a nation
remember the victims of the last two wars at the 11th hour of
the 11th day of the 11th month - regardless of our personal involvement
in the wars or whether our immediate friends and family were
substantially affected by them, as that little boy's were. Such
ceremonies are arguably a part of a sort of pact between the
living and the dead, but perhaps we should ask ourselves how
much such events give us permission' to think in bigoted
terms about other nations and encourage a mentality in which
it is proper to blame the children for the sins of their fathers
- not overtly, perhaps, but by implying that the children conform
to the same stereotype as that attributed to their parents during
the period of conflict
There is no doubt that such stereotypes
are encouraged in time of war between countries. We are asked
to think of a whole nation as being our enemy, and as living
by different and lower standards than us. In war, propaganda
replaces truth. There is no distinction between those of the
enemy who may really be against us and those who disagree with
what is going on and just want to get on with living their lives.
Such an attitude towards the enemy unites us in common cause
against them and so helps the war effort'. At the end of
any war, however, the hatred and distrust so engendered lives
on - on both sides - and we become set in our belief that the
behaviour attributed to the enemy' is in fact their national
characteristic. An idea the red tops are only too happy to play
on to sell newspapers.
Unfortunately it is not only in time of
outright war that this happens. It is happening now. Certain
sections of the Muslim community are encouraged to see Jew and
Western 'infidel' alike as their enemy and the enemy of their
religion. This is based in part upon Israeli occupation'
of Palestine and underlined both by the West's activities in
Iraq and what is perceived as the West's decadence as judged
by their religious values. Likewise, terrorist attacks by some
such people encourage us to think that anyone who is a Muslim
shares the beliefs of the people perpetrating them and so we
are suspicious of them all.
That we have people who will try to build
peace upon such unpromising foundations is encouraging and vital
in dampening down the fires of violence. It seems to me, however,
that we should all try to set an example both by refusing to
accept such use of national or religious stereotyping and by
making a real effort to bring to an end the re-living of our
old conflicts.
In that context we ought to continue down
the path of making remembrance ceremonies non-specific as regards
particular wars and particular enemies. If not, we are part of
the same mentality as that which seems to exist in the Middle
East with its memories of wrongs going back not 60 years, but
thousands of years - and with the corresponding urge to wreak
vengeance. As my cousin pointed out at the same time, the Jews
themselves remember their escape from enslavement to the Egyptians
in their passover ceremony each year - and their exodus from
Egypt must have been at least 3,000 years ago! No, national
memories of terrible events should be allowed to slide away fairly
quickly into the relative calm of the history class, where the
circumstances can be properly explained and set in the context
of the times.
Of course, the young boy who suffered the
tragedy of losing his parents will never forget and will, with
his friends, continue to meet in front of the plaque to remember
those taken from him. Such a very personal loss cannot easily
be put to the back of the mind.
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