Vanguard News Network
VNN Media
VNN Digital Library
VNN Reader Mail
VNN Broadcasts

Old September 27th, 2017 #1
alex revision
Senior Member
 
alex revision's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 27,577
Default Holocaust, Victims of Communism — Two new monuments, basic questions overlooked?

Holocaust, Victims of Communism — Two new monuments, basic questions overlooked?

Commuters along the Macdonald Parkway or moving back and forth across the Chaudiere Bridge can’t help to have noticed the construction of the National Holocaust Monument, which began in earnest this spring. Colossal concrete walls of seemingly impossible dimensions have been set at unthinkable angles to create a jarring, oppressive impression. As seen from the air, these walls form a broken Star of David, the symbol the Nazis forced Jews to wear as a means of identification. Edward Burtynsky photographs of six Holocaust sites in Europe have been hand-painted on the walls. Only one of these photographs — a haunting railway track that would have led to the Treblinka extermination camp — is visible from outside the structure.

Now completed, the monument’s opening ceremony happens on September 27.

The National Holocaust Monument is built at a prime nexus: an intersection that includes the Canadian War Museum and the Canadian Firefighters Memorial, as well as such future landmarks as an LRT station, the central library, and the Sens stadium.

The same cannot be said for the Memorial to the Victims of Communism, which, after getting the go-ahead earlier this year, will be hidden away in the Garden of the Provinces and Territories (that well-shaded plateau kitty-corner to the Library and Archives).

The arrival of these monuments brings contentious details: the aesthetics (ugly or tasteful?), the cost ($8.95 million for the National Holocaust Monument, $3 million for the Communism memorial), and the location — Holocaust next to the War Museum makes sense, but proximity to a future entertainment complex could depreciate its impact. Meanwhile, the location of the Communism memorial suggests Canada always welcomed refugees — which isn’t true. And why is Canada the last of the Second World War allied nations to have a monument to the Holocaust built in its capital?

As we consider these two new monuments, some very basic questions might be overlooked.

Dacia Viejo-Rose, a professor of cultural identity at Cambridge University, has written extensively about monuments, specifically those built in the wake of European conflicts. She asks “… what roles can memorials play, how do they remain relevant and therefore important?” The answer, she suggests, may lie in how they are used, “for better or for worse.”

And so we might ask: How will we use these monuments?

It’s hard to imagine the Holocaust monument being used for anything other than its intended purpose: as a monument to the victims and survivors of the Shoah. But as Menachem Freedman of the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre wrote in a 2014 Globe and Mail op-ed column, Ottawa’s monument is “not integrally connected to a Holocaust museum.” As such, it “depends entirely on the viewer to imbue it with significance and content — always a risky proposal.” Over time, he suggests, such monuments become “statements of forgetting rather than prompts for remembering.”

When Freedman wrote about the Holocaust monument, the Syrian refugee crisis was making headlines and the Conservative government’s response was not very inspiring. For Holocaust survivors, that was a reminder of how countries such as Canada turned away Jewish refugees during World War II. This prompted Freedman to write, “Without a renewed commitment to the universal human rights that emerged in the wake of the Shoah, Canada’s new memorial may in fact turn living memory to stone.”

In other words, regardless of the monument’s intent or aesthetic appeal, if it does not affect actions or policy, it will be little more than, as Freedman suggests, an empty symbol.

Given its location, will the National Holocaust Monument simply become another landmark in a city full of landmarks? Will it be urinated upon by inebriated sports fans? Will the monument eventually fail to spark interest in those streaming by?

https://ottawamagazine.com/people-an...ns-overlooked/
 
Old September 27th, 2017 #2
alex revision
Senior Member
 
alex revision's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 27,577
Default

Liberals working on apology for 1939 decision to refuse ship of Jewish refugees

OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are working on an apology for the Canadian government's decision in 1939 to turn away a boat of German Jews hoping to seek asylum in Canada, The Canadian Press has learned.

Some wanted the apology for the MS St. Louis to come in concert with Wednesday's inauguration of the National Holocaust Monument in Ottawa, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made only passing reference to the incident in his speech marking the occasion.

From the monument, Trudeau noted, it is possible to see the Peace Tower. But that's also a reminder that Canada has not always been a welcoming nation.

https://www.guelphtoday.com/national...efugees-727726
 
Old October 4th, 2017 #3
alex revision
Senior Member
 
alex revision's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 27,577
Default

Canada removes Holocaust memorial plaque that failed to mention Jews

Plaque inaugurating new monument noted ‘millions of men, women and children murdered’, prompting Conservative MP’s criticism

Canada’s government has removed a plaque inaugurating the country’s new Holocaust monument after critics blasted it for failing to mention Jewish people or antisemitism.

During its unveiling last week in Ottawa, Justin Trudeau gave a speech highlighting the national memorial as evidence of the government’s commitment to fighting antisemitism, racism and xenophobia.

But the monument’s plaque simply honoured the “millions of men, women and children murdered during the Holocaust” and commemorated those who persevered through “one of the darkest chapters in history”.

On Tuesday, the Conservative MP David Sweet assailed the federal Liberals for their “profoundly obvious omission.” Speaking during question period, Sweet added: “If we are going to stamp out hatred toward Jews, it is important to get history right.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...plaque-removed
 
Reply

Share


Thread
Display Modes


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:22 AM.
Page generated in 0.29994 seconds.