By Judy Lash Balint
KIBBUTZ LOCHAMIE HAGHETAOT—A couple of Israeli Air Force jets scream through the sky
over this kibbutz on Israel's northern coastal road between Akko and Nahariya
as the ceremony marking the end of Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day draws
to a close.
It must be quite a sight from up there—ten thousand people filling every
space in the amphitheatre of the Ghetto Fighters' House, standing to attention
for Israel's national anthem, Hatikva—The Hope. Dozens of Israeli flags
fluttering in the warm breeze of an early spring evening; six large flames
flickering against a backdrop of scores of smaller flames held by Navy officer
recruits, clad in their formal all-white uniforms.
What the pilots can't see is the central figure on the stage. The diminutive
Zevik Lavi, one of their own, the first pilot in Israel's Air Force back in
the 1940s. Lavi, in civilian clothes, stands to attention next to two of his
grandchildren in army uniform. An actor has just read the story of Zevik's
life in the ghetto, escape from a Nazi transport train, years spent with the
partisans and his eventual arrival in Palestine.
The theme of this year's Ghetto Fighters House gathering is "Eretz Israel—First
Encounters," and Zevik's triumphant story is part of the moving event.
Unlike the more somber, formal ceremony of remembrance that took place at Yad
Vashem the night before in the presence of President Moshe Katzav and Prime
Minister EhudOlmert and a slew of officials and politicians, the Ghetto
Fighters' Museum strives to look to the future and encompass as many youth as
possible. The audience at Yad Vashem is filled mainly with survivors and their
families. At Ghetto Fighters' Museum, more than eighty percent of the
participants are blue-shirted teenagers representing the plethora of youth
movements active in the country.
The white-uniformed Naval cadets marching onto the stage bearing torches frame
the brief Yizkor (Memorial) ceremony. Energetic dancers of the Kibbutz Dance
Company evoke the slave labor camps with their movements.
When the moment comes to light the six flames of remembrance, Amy and Richard
Miller mount the stage together with the other Israelis. The Millers have
traveled from New York to take part in the Yom Hashoah event. Amy is the
president of the American Friends of the Ghetto Fighters' Museum responsible
for raising funds for many of the new projects aimed at Holocaust education in
Israel.
Several of the flames are lit by survivors and their children or
grandchildren. As they light, their stories are told and we see photos of
their lives during the Shoah on the massive screen behind them. The emphasis
is on the incredible tales of how they made their way to Palestine in the
1940s.
Kibbutz
Lochamei Haghetaot was established in 1949 by the young veterans of the
partisans and survivors of the Nazi death camps who wanted to continue their
lives together. Tonight, some of those pioneers along with their next two
generations, read poetry, sing nostalgic Yiddish songs and speak about their
experiences. It's both a commemoration of the unfathomable lost legacy of
those who perished as well as an affirmation of the present and future of a
strong people who have endured and continue to endure baseless hatred.
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Judy Lash Balint is an award-winning Jerusalem-based writer and author of
Jerusalem Diaries: In Tense Times. (Gefen) www.jerusalemdiaries.com
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