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just whose Holocaust is it,
anyway?
On the face of it, the ques-
tion sounds silly. The Holo-
caust, while affecting other groups,
was an overwhelmingly Jewish event,
a tragedy grimly consistent with the
history of our people.
But the extent to which scholars
compare and contrast the Holocaust
to other instances of genocide, and try
to apply its lessons in today's world,
are matters of growing controversy.
That emotional debate is one sub-
theme in the recent controversy over
the appointment of John K. Roth as
head of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
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S ale
Washington Correspondent
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many. They worry that scholars and III!
curators spend too much time maid<
comparisons to other events — Cam-
bodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, among others
— and too little explaining to the
world the unique character of this
genocide.
They point to what they see as a
kind of revisionism in which the Jew-
ishness of Hitler's victims is almost
incidental to the story.
('
They also worry that turning the -`
Holocaust spotlight on today's events
inevitably injects a political element
into remembrance, since genocide is
generally not a cut-and-dried matter
until it is examined in retrospect.
The museum in Washington, the
world's leading center for Holocaust
scholarship and research as well as a
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The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum: Connection to the past?
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Museum's new academic arm, the
Center for Advanced Holocaust Stud-
ies. Mr. Roth, according to some, is
among those scholars favoring a "uni-
versalist” approach that they say
detracts from the special Jewish char-
acter of the Hitler nightmare.
But most mainstream Holocaust
scholars reject both the specific
charges against Mr. Roth and the
broader allegation that the academic
study of the Holocaust somehow is
"de-Judaizing" the Nazi genocide. The
Holocaust was a Jewish event, they
say, but its lessons go far beyond the
specific targets of Hitler's victims, a
fact that is grimly evident in today's
headlines.
The critics are few, but their voices
are loud, their passion strong.
The Holocaust, they charge, is
being transformed from a Jewish event
into just one more genocide among
memorial to the victims, has become a
lightning rod for that anxiety.
"Will the Museum be a museum
that talks about the Holocaust in 20
years — or will it be a general geno-
cide museum, showing all kinds of
genocides?" asked Rabbi Avi Weiss,
one of the harshest critics.
Most Holocaust scholars don't deny
the uniqueness of the Holocaust, but
they also say that for the memory to
have meaning over the centuries —
and, more importantly, to have an
impact on human behavior — links
must be drawn, comparisons made.
The lessons can be universal, even if
the experience is not.
From the outset, the Holocaust
Museum has tried to use the detailed
portrayal of what happened during the
Holocaust as an object lesson to the
world. That intention was signaled at
the opening ceremonies five years ago,