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THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much -- (applause) -- to Sara
Bloomfield, for the wonderful introduction and the outstanding
work that she's doing; to Fred Zeidman; Joel Geiderman; Mr.
Wiesel -- thank you for your wisdom and your witness; Speaker
Nancy Pelosi; Senator Dick Durbin; members of Congress; our
good friend the Ambassador of Israel; members of the United
States Holocaust Memorial Council; and most importantly,
the survivors and rescuers and their families who are here today.
It is a great honor for me to be here, and I'm grateful that I
have the opportunity to address you briefly.
We gather today to mourn the loss of so many lives, and
celebrate those who saved them; honor those who survived, and
contemplate the obligations of the living.
It is the grimmest of ironies that one of the most savage,
barbaric acts of evil in history began in one of the most
modernized societies of its time, where so many markers of
human progress became tools of human depravity: science that
can heal used to kill; education that can enlighten used to
rationalize away basic moral impulses; the bureaucracy that
sustains modern life used as the machinery of mass death -- a
ruthless, chillingly efficient system where many were
responsible for the killing, but few got actual blood on their hands.
While the uniqueness of the Holocaust in scope and in method
is truly astounding, the Holocaust was driven by many of
the same forces that have fueled atrocities throughout history:
the scapegoating that leads to hatred and blinds us to our
common humanity; the justifications that replace
conscience and allow cruelty to spread; the willingness of those
who are neither perpetrators nor victims to accept the assigned
role of bystander, believing the lie that good people are ever
powerless or alone, the fiction that we do not have a choice.
But while we are here today to bear witness to the human
capacity to destroy, we are also here to pay tribute to the human
impulse to save.
In the moral accounting of the Holocaust, as we reckon with
numbers like 6 million, as we recall the horror of numbers
etched into arms, we also factor in numbers like these: 7,200 --
the number of Danish Jews ferried to safety, many of whom
later returned home to find the neighbors who rescued them had
also faithfully tended their homes and businesses and
belongings while they were gone.
We remember the number five -- the five righteous men and women
who join us today from Poland.
We are awed by your acts of courage and conscience.
And your presence today compels each of us to ask ourselves
whether we would have done what you did.
We can only hope that the answer is yes.
We also remember the number 5,000 -- the number of Jews
rescued by the villagers of Le Chambon, France -- one life
saved for each of its 5,000 residents.
Not a single Jew who came there was turned away, or turned in.
But it was not until decades later that the villagers spoke
of what they had done -- and even then, only reluctantly.
The author of a book on the rescue found that those he
interviewed were baffled by his interest.
"How could you call us 'good'?" they said.
"We were doing what had to be done."
That is the question of the righteous -- those who would do
extraordinary good at extraordinary risk not for
affirmation or acclaim or to advance their own interests, but
because it is what must be done.
They remind us that no one is born a savior or a murderer --
these are choices we each have the power to make.
They teach us that no one can make us into bystanders without
our consent, and that we are never truly alone -- that if we
have the courage to heed that "still, small voice" within us,
we can form a minyan for righteousness that can span a
village, even a nation.
Their legacy is our inheritance.
And the question is, how do we honor and preserve it?
How do we ensure that "never again" isn't an empty slogan, or
merely an aspiration, but also a call to action?
I believe we start by doing what we are doing today -- by bearing
witness, by fighting the silence that is evil's greatest co-conspirator.
In the face of horrors that defy comprehension, the impulse to
silence is understandable.
My own great uncle returned from his service in World War II in a
state of shock, saying little, alone with painful memories that
would not leave his head.
He went up into the attic, according to the stories that
I've heard, and wouldn't come down for six months.
He was one of the liberators -- someone who at a very tender age
had seen the unimaginable.
And so some of the liberators who are here today honor us with
their presence -- all of whom we honor for their extraordinary service.
My great uncle was part of the 89th Infantry Division -- the
first Americans to reach a Nazi concentration camp.
And they liberated Ohrdruf, part of Buchenwald, where tens of
thousands had perished.
The story goes that when the Americans marched in, they
discovered the starving survivors and the piles of dead bodies.
And General Eisenhower made a decision.
He ordered Germans from the nearby town to tour the camp, so
they could see what had been done in their name.
And he ordered American troops to tour the camp, so they could
see the evil they were fighting against.
Then he invited congressmen and journalists to bear witness.
And he ordered that photographs and films be made.
Some of us have seen those same images, whether in the Holocaust
Museum or when I visited Yad Vashem, and they never leave you.
Eisenhower said that he wanted "to be in a position to give
firsthand evidence of these things, if ever, in the future,
there develops a tendency to charge these allegations merely to propaganda."
Eisenhower understood the danger of silence.
He understood that if no one knew what had happened, that
would be yet another atrocity -- and it would be the
perpetrators' ultimate triumph.
What Eisenhower did to record these crimes for history is what
we are doing here today.
That's what Elie Wiesel and the survivors we honor here do by
fighting to make their memories part of our collective memory.
That's what the Holocaust Museum does every day on our National
Mall, the place where we display for the world our triumphs and
failures and the lessons we've learned from our history.
It's the very opposite of silence.
But we must also remember that bearing witness is not the end
of our obligation -- it's just the beginning.
We know that evil has yet to run its course on Earth.
We've seen it in this century in the mass graves and the ashes of
villages burned to the ground, and children used as soldiers
and rape used as a weapon of war.
To this day, there are those who insist the Holocaust never
happened; who perpetrate every form of intolerance -- racism
and anti-Semitism, homophobia, xenophobia, sexism, and more --
hatred that degrades its victim and diminishes us all.
Today, and every day, we have an opportunity, as well as an
obligation, to confront these scourges -- to fight the impulse
to turn the channel when we see images that disturb us, or wrap
ourselves in the false comfort that others' sufferings are not our own.
Instead we have the opportunity to make a habit of empathy; to
recognize ourselves in each other; to commit ourselves to
resisting injustice and intolerance and indifference in
whatever forms they may take -- whether confronting those who
tell lies about history, or doing everything we can to
prevent and end atrocities like those that took place in Rwanda,
those taking place in Darfur.
That is my commitment as President.
I hope that is yours, as well.
It will not be easy.
At times, fulfilling these obligations require
self-reflection.
But in the final analysis, I believe history gives us cause
for hope rather than despair -- the hope of a chosen people who
have overcome oppression since the days of Exodus; of the
nation of Israel rising from the destruction of the Holocaust; of
the strong and enduring bonds between our nations.
It is the hope, too, of those who not only survived, but chose
to live, teaching us the meaning of courage and resilience and dignity.
I'm thinking today of a study conducted after the war that
found that Holocaust survivors living in America actually had a
higher birthrate than American Jews.
What a stunning act of faith -- to bring a child in a world that
has shown you so much cruelty; to believe that no matter what
you have endured, or how much you have lost, in the end, you
have a duty to life.
We find cause for hope as well in Protestant and Catholic
children attending school together in Northern Ireland; in
Hutus and Tutsis living side by side, forgiving neighbors who
have done the unforgivable; in a movement to save Darfur that has
thousands of high school and college chapters in 25
countries, and brought 70,000 people to the Washington Mall --
people of every age and faith and background and race united
in common cause with suffering brothers and sisters halfway
around the world.
Those numbers can be our future -- our fellow citizens of the
world showing us how to make the journey from oppression to
survival, from witness to resistance, and ultimately to reconciliation.
That is what we mean when we say "never again."
So today, during this season when we celebrate liberation,
resurrection, and the possibility of redemption, may
each of us renew our resolve to do what must be done.
And may we strive each day, both individually and as a nation, to
be among the righteous.
Thank you, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.
(Applause.)