The 2023 film Bearing Witness witnesses thousands blaming Jews, blaming the Jewish state, for being butchered, raped, their children beheaded. If we thought humans couldn’t reach new depths post-Holocaust, we were wrong. 

In 1969, at age 18, I went to Israel. My aunt took me to Yad Vashem, my first time. I held my tears in until the very last exhibit. I saw a silent towering pile of children’s shoes – worn, scuffed, shoelaces torn. I broke down sobbing. In 2015, again in Israel, I went through the Yad Vashem Children’s Memorial. It was hollowed out from an underground cavern, darkly lit, with uneven steps, keeping you unbalanced. The ceiling is filled with stars for each of these murdered children. As you walk slowly through, you hear the names of the 1.5 million slaughtered Jewish children called out, one by one. The unbearable ache never completely goes away.

One little girl stays with me. She is never far from my consciousness. The Holocaust documentary shows her trying to roll up the sleeve on her tattered coat, as she was asked to do, to show the tattoo of the number on her tiny arm. She did this with earnestness and intensity, as if to say to the world, to someone, to anyone, “If I do what I’m told, if I am a good girl, maybe this nightmare will stop.” It did not stop.

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