Emerging out of a society where possession of a pigmented skin was a sign of degradation and stigma, the knowledge of the existence of antisemitism gave a perspective that racism was not only dependent on skin colour, and that even white people could be victims of stereotyping, discrimination and persecution. It was clearly demonstrated that there was a role in the new South Africa for Holocaust education that would raise the issues of race prejudice and abuse of power when taken to its extremes. The interest was there, but the extent and efficacy of these short term programmes was restricted because there was no permanent Holocaust centre or exhibition in Cape Town, or in South Africa.
On the 29th April 1994, three weeks after the Cape Town exhibition closed, white and black stood chatting and relaxed in long peaceful queues that snaked around the polling stations, in the first election in which every citizen could vote no matter how many melanosomes their epidermis contained. The ANC came to power on the basis of wanting to create a non-racial country where bigotry (including antisemitism) would not be tolerated and they have succeeded. South Africa was the only country in the world in which a substantial Jewish community lived within a black majority but Judaism was just regarded as one square in a quilt of beliefs in a culture of tolerance which included the acceptance of eleven instead of two official languages.
Click here to continue to Part II
1
.I should like to thank Myra Osrin, Jocelyn Stoch and Maxine Boyd of the Cape Town Holocaust Centre, Dr Ute Ben Yosef and Lorraine Knight of the Jacob Gitlin Library and Evan and Roy Robins for their help in the preparation of this article.
2
.For details see Israel Gutman, The Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust (New York: Collier, 1990); Masha Greenbaum, The Jews of Lithuania: A History of a Remarkable Community, (Jerusalem: Geffen, 1995). From a secret report from Karl Jaeger, Commander of Einsatzkommando 3 dated 25 November 1941. I can state today that the goal of solving the Jewish problem in Lithuania has been attained by Einsatzkommando 3. There are no Jews in Lithuania anymore, except those needed for work and their families
I intend to kill off these working Jews too but the civil administration and the Wehrmacht need them and their families for the war effort. The goal of ridding Lithuania of Jews could not have been achieved without the co-operation of the Lithuanian partisans and the respective civil offices. Only proper timing helped us to carry out five aktionnen per week and do the current job. The aktionnen in Kovno itself, where a sufficient number of trained partisans was available, may be described as shooting ducks in an arcade. We can now report a total of 133,346 Jews killed to date
"(Masha Greenbaum)
3
.Andreas Huyssen, quoted in Neville Dubow, Imaging the Unimaginable: Holocaust Memory in Art and Architecture, (Cape Town; Jewish Publications - South Africa, University of Cape Town, 2001), 3.
4
.Gwynne Schrire, ed. , In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995)
5
.Milton Shain, Antisemitism (London: Bowerdean Briefings, 1998),81
6
. Gordon Allport, The Nature of Prejudice, Anchor Book ed. (New York: Doubleday Anchor, 1958), 66.
7
.Milton Shain, The Roots of Antisemitism in South Africa,( Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1994),144.
8
.Milton Shain, "If it Was So Good, Why Was it So Bad," in Memories, Realities and Dreams: Aspects of the South African Jewish Experience, ed. M Shain and R Mendelsohn, (Cape Town: Jonathan Ball, 2000), 87.
9
.See Mendel Kaplan,Jewish Roots in the South African Economy, (Cape Town; C Struik,1986); "Jews and the Law in South Africa", Jewish Affairs, Vol. 55 No2, 2000; "South African Jews and Medicine", Jewish Affairs, Vol 56 No 2, 2001
10
.Nathan Berger, In Those Days, In These Times (1929-1979), Spotlighting Events in Jewry - South African and General, (Johannesburg:Kayor 1979), 53.
11
.Louis Hotz," The Refugees en Route - Restrictions on immigration in South Africa" In Frieda Sichel, From Refugee to Citizen, (Cape Town: A A Balkema,1966)
12
.Die Burger, 29 March 1943
13
.Eric Louw, Member of Parliament for Beaufort West, WD Brink, MP for Christiana, MJ van den Berg, MP for Krugersdorp, Hansard, 10 April 1944, in Michael A Green, South African Jewish Responses to the Holocaust, 1941-1948, (MA Thesis, University of South Africa, 1987)
14
.Editor, Zionist Record, 27 November1942
15
.Michael A Green, South African Jewish Responses to the Holocaust, 1941-1948, (MA Thesis, University of South Africa, 1987), 61
16
.Michael A Green, South African Jewish Responses to the Holocaust, 1941-1948, (MA Thesis, University of South Africa, 1987), 94, 135
17
.Michael A Green, South African Jewish Responses to the Holocaust, 1941-1948, (MA Thesis, University of South Africa, 1987),14 February 1947,167
18
.Raul Hilberg, The Destruction of the European Jewry.(Chicago: Quadrangle Books,1985), 983.
19
.Helene Czerniewicz, "In Hiding in France", in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 77.
20
. Miriam Lichterman, interview, ( 17 June 2003)
21
.Miriam Lichterman, "Life in Auschwitz", in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 135.
22
.Lotte Liebrecht, interview, (2 August, 1996).
23
.Karl Langer,"In Hiding in Holland",in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 46.
24
.Miriam Lichterman, interview, (17 June 2003)
25
.Clarissa Jacobi, "The Unanswered Question", in Brochure, Holocaust Exhibition Commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the Liberation of the Nazi Concentration Camps, S A Cultural Museum, (17 April -15 May 1986), 13
26
.RA, "From Rhodes Island to Auschwitz", in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 153.
27
.Miriam Lichterman, interview,17 June 2003.
28
.Xavier Piat-ka, "She'erith Hapletah", in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 194.
29
.Myra Osrin, interview, 22 June 2003
30
.Brochure, Holocaust Exhibition Commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the Liberation of the Nazi Concentration Camps, S A Cultural Museum, (17 April -15 May 1986), 2.
31
.Miriam Lichterman, interview,17 June 2003
32
.Violette Fintz, "From Rhodes Island to Auschwitz", in In Sacred Memory: Recollections of the Holocaust by Survivors Living in Cape Town, ed. Gwynne Schrire (Cape Town: Holocaust Memorial Council, 1995), 148.
33
.Miriam Lichterman, interview,17 June 2003
34
. Diana Jean Schemo, "Good Germans: Honoring the Heroes. And Hiding the Holocaust". The New York Times: The Week in Review 12 June 1994
35
.D.W. Krüger, The Making of a Nation, (London: Macmillan, 1967), 238
36
. Myra Osrin, interview, 22 June 2003
37
.Anne Frank in the World at the South African National Gallery, (1 March to 4 April 1994),Exhibition Leaflet.
38
.Myra Osrin, interview, 22 June 2003
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from the December 2007 Chanukah Edition of the Jewish Magazine