Jews in WWII: history’s defining moment
As I read Isabel Allende’s The Wind Knows My Name which begins when Samuel Adler’s father who disappears during Kristallnacht, I think that the plight of the Jews at the hands of the Germans and others is the primary event in recent history that defines the state of the world. There are, perhaps, some 70,000 books about the war. As for those directly related to Geman, Russian, and other countries’ crimes against the Jewish people, I cannot determine.
It’s hard to read such novels and nonfiction accounts without Xanax and/or Scotch to tame the horror in one’s mind and stomach at the unmitigated cruelty against one of the world’s major ethnic groups without rational purpose–unless you consider myths rational enough to justify it.
What bothers me is that the myths are illogical rationale for targeting the Jews are still with us, even within the U.S. where one would think we’ve outgrown such hatred. You can follow the fight against this evil by looking at the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. According to its website, ” The IHRA identifies the practical needs of policymakers, scholars, educators, and museum professionals working in the Holocaust remembrance sector, and it produces materials to support the work of these stakeholders. Resources such as IHRA academic publications, educational guidelines, and reports are written by experts for the benefit of non-experts, helping to ensure that the IHRA’s expertise can serve a highly practical function throughout IHRA’s member countries and beyond.”
I believe we owe it to ourselves and to the Jewish people to stay informed about the ongoing problems rather than assuming that since we see nothing bad happening outside our windows, there are no issues to fight.
From the publisher, we read, “The lives of a Jewish boy escaping Nazi-occupied Europe and a mother and daughter fleeing twenty-first-century El Salvador intersect in this ambitious, intricate novel about war and immigration” (People), from the New York Times bestselling author of A Long Petal of the Sea and Violeta. “Allende’s storytelling walks a lyrical romanticism on roads imposed by social and political turmoil.”
The danger, I think, is believing that such problems are gone with the wind. They are not. They live with more vitality than any of us would believe.
–Malcolm