|
Jacob
Hiatt
Dedication
Remarks May 11, 1979
We are grateful to the trustees of Holy Cross and to the Society
of Jesus for this great and historic occasion. We shall always
appreciate their sensitive act of Friendship in dedicating the
two beautiful wings of this Library as a memorial to our parents
and to the six million Jews who were victims of the Holocaust.
The slaughter
and carnage of those dreadful years constitute one of the darkest
chapters of all human history. It is our duty to remember and
to continue to protest at a time when there are those who refuse
to believe that this great tragedy actually occurred. It is
heartening to know that this prestiguous Jesuit Community, dedicated
to the highest ideals of justice and ethics, has made this designation
to tell the world that the inconceivable is a fact - a frightful
reality from which we cannot hide nor deny.
The dedication
of this Holocaust Memorial is an affirmation of faith, a faith
not easily won without deep inner struggle. Abraham reasoned
with God to demand justice, even for the wicked city of Sodom.
Jeremiah, too, remonstrated with God, "Tzadik ata hashem kee
ariv ailecha." Out of deep anguish he demanded to know "Why
does the way of the wicked prosper - why are the workers of
treachery at ease?" And, in our own time, Professor (Elie) Wiesel
has given repeatedly eloquent expression to those who wondered
where God was to be found during the dark days of the destruction
of millions of Jews, men, women and children.
The bitter
search for the hidden God goes on, and in dedicating this memorial
to the victims of the Holocaust we will give some expression
to the doubts and uncertainties which plague every thinking
and feeling person. Yet, the history of my people has also been
characterized by the continuing victory of faith over all the
doubts and painful protests, justifiable as they are. In the
end, despite our suffering, we have continued to believe that
a Godless world is a world without order, a veritable inhuman
jungle.
For this
reason, we memorialize the dead by reciting the Kaddish, a prayer
which even in our darkest hours affirms that God is master of
the world. It is a prayer which also forces us to face human
suffering honestly and to judge our own part. Have we here on
earth done all that we could and all that we should to alleviate
suffering and to save the victims? The Holocaust is a testament
to our failure. Every one of us who lived in the free world
during the destruction is guilty, for we did not do enough.
Today we
must vow that neither we nor the world shall be permitted to
forget, and certainly this Library will continue to bring the
message to generations of students and teachers who enter these
gates. And it will remind them that, during the period when
Europe had reached seemingly unparalleled heights of culture,
men of learning became beasts, insatiable in their drive to
destroy, to eliminate, to annihilate the six million Jews who
were tortured, gassed and burned alive for no other reason than
they were Jews.
Sad to
relate, a free world stood by in silent indifference. I know
all of us are praying silently and privately, each in his own
way reciting the Kaddish prayer for the martyred victims, and
we beg their forgiveness.
Again,
my heartfelt thanks to my very dear friends at Holy Cross College
and to the Jesuit Order for providing this monument of memory,
of protest and of faith.
|