Shamai Leibowitz

Learning Nothing

“A Nazi guard beat me on my skull until my head was bleeding. I collapsed on the ground… I wanted to do the mitzvah of counting the Omer, so with all my strength, I sat up, said the blessing for sefirat ha-omer, and immediately fell back and fainted. The next morning was quiet. I heard shouts, ‘Mir zenen fray! We are free!‘ I came out of hiding… and I saw American tanks and soldiers and knew that we were bnei chorin – free people!

— Rabbi  Menashe Klein, a.k.a Ungvaver Rav, on his liberation from Buchenwald.

On this Yom HaShoah, we remember the millions murdered by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. 

We find inspiration in the victims and survivors who showed physical and spiritual resistance.

Most importantly, we resoundingly reject the dehumanization of any people—the same sin that made the horrors of the past possible, and continues to be used to excuse the mass killing of civilians today. 

If our ‘Never Again’ does not compel us to resist genocide, starvation, and war crimes wherever they occur, then we have learned nothing. 

Our commitment to justice is the only true way to honor their memory.

About the Author
Adjunct professor of Hebrew and Judaics at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center. Born and raised in Israel. Law degree from Bar Ilan University and a Master's in International Legal Studies from American University Washington College of Law. Also, a Baal Kore at my shul. DISCLAIMER: The views expressed here are solely mine, and do not represent the views of DLIFLC or any other institution with which I am affiliated.
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