In an important and significant visit, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople visited Yad Vashem on Tuesday, May 27 and toured the Holocaust History Museum, participated in a memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance, visited the Children's Memorial, and signed the Yad Vashem Guest Book. He and his delegation were guided by Dr. Robert Rozett, Director of the Yad Vashem Libraries. The following is his speech, which he delivered at the conclusion of his visit.
Dear brothers and
sisters,
We are very grateful to
God for the opportunity once again to visit this remarkable monument today, and
to honor the souls and memories commemorated here. Just a few days ago we
walked through the gates of Dachau. In that place of such incomprehensible pain
our heart was grieved and we mourned deeply at the realization of the human
potential for destruction. These emotions returned as we took the walkway down
into the Children's Memorial. It seemed as if we had entered the abode of the
dead. The location of the memorial under the Earth vividly represents the
inexplicable loss that was the Shoah, the Holocaust. All who descent into the
inner chamber of the Museum are free to walk away when they choose and return
to the sunlight. Such was not the case for these 1.5 million children whose
lives were taken from them through hatred and unspeakable violence. As
difficult as it was to look into the faces of these precious children, who
represent all of the slaughtered innocents, we must do so and we must remember.
On this day we realize
that if we turn away from the pain and sadness of the remembrance of what may
have been humanity's greatest tragedy, generations to come may deny the reality
which is memorialized in this place. Already 70 years have come and gone and
for some the Holocaust seems to be a story from the distant past. Yet we still
have not completely healed. What is more tragic is that we have not fully
comprehended the lessons of this singular event in world history. The hatred,
suspicion and desire to dominate or even extinguish another culture are still
lurking within the hearts of men. With every symbolic rekindling of the flame
of this place, in this place another flame of war or kidnapping or oppression
is rekindled somewhere in the world. We condemn any acts of terrorism, anti-Semitism
and xenophobia. We must publically profess that the crime against the believers
of any faith is an abomination of the face of God.
Dear friends, we have
read in the prophet Jeremiah's writings that “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can know it?” This museum is a testimony to the reality of humanity's capacity to be deceived by the enemy of God and to act in
unthinkable ways and to commit unspeakable atrocities. The future can be no
better than the past if people from all cultures, religions and political
thought do not learn well the lessons of the Shoah. Great tyranny and
oppression were stopped in some small way by ordinary people, many of whom are
commemorated in the Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations. Each person here
in Israel and throughout the world has the power to make choices that lead to life,
health and peace. May we all have the wisdom to recognize the deception of
oppression and find the courage to stand in solidarity to oppose those who
would someday repeat the horror of the Shoah.
In closing, we must mention
the hope that this memorial brings to the world. We have never been in a place
which more clearly illustrates the truth that even in the depths of the earth,
in the darkest room, there is light. The millions of little lives, here, bear witness
to the reality that God has not forsaken the world. He is all powerful and governs
the affairs of humanity. In the midst of tragedy he stands ready to rekindle
every heart that is broken and to restore those who have suffered great harm.
What the Psalmist wrote is still true. "Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all sins." May
those memorialized in this place rest in peace and may their memory be eternal.
Thank you, may God bless
you all.
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