Holocaust Mocked by Ohio State University Band Members

As too many around the world continue to recognize the continuing threat of Nazi terrorist activity, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) was sad to see a report from the Wall Street Journal about a book of “satire,” “comedy” music distributed by college band members, which mocks the Holocaust.  It reported the Ohio State University Marching Band (OSUMB) created a book of “parody songs,” which denigrated people of minority identity groups.  R.E.A.L. is also aware that OSUMB song book also had a song for Adolf Hitler singing about him killing Jewish people as part of their “comedy” songs (which was clearly part of their “parody” songs at least since 2006).

In the most recent OSUMB “parody song book” the members distributed a song called “Goodbye Kramer,” which mocked the Holocaust.  The Wall Street Journal reported that the song mocking the Holocaust made “joking references to furnaces used in Nazi concentration camps and the train cars used to transport Jews to their deaths.”  The Wall Street Journal reported that the contemptible song had “lines about Nazi soldiers ‘searching for people livin’ in their neighbor’s attic,’ and a ‘small town Jew…who took the cattle train to you know where.’ ”  The Wall Street Journal reports additional details on graphic, disgusting remarks mocking the Holocaust in the OSUMB song book, which R.E.A.L. will not republish here.  The detailed lyrics in the OSUMB Holocaust mockery song clearly demonstrate there were sung by those with no conscience and no respect for human life and dignity.

Former band member Lee Auer, who is now a band instructor in central Ohio, told the WSJ that he knew the parody song book was fun: “It was fun for me as an individual, but we knew if the public ever caught wind of them, people are going to lose respect. Now, I feel worse about it than I ever did. ”  But let’s be clear, Mr. Lee Auer is not concerned that it was WRONG, he is concerned about whether people will lose respect for him.  He doesn’t make a public statement apologizing that it was morally and ethically wrong.  His concern then, as now, is only for himself.

The Daily Mail also reports that the OSUMB “parody tune written by members of the controversy-riddled band included references to furnaces used in Nazi concentration camps and the train cars used to transport Jews to their deaths.”

What none of the media has reported is that this OSUMB “parody song book” also had an earlier version in 2006 with a song for Adolf Hitler called “The Hitler Song,” where members of the OSUMB band sang “Kill the Jews all night, Kill the Jews all day.”

The OSUMB song book introduction stated it was including the Holocaust mockery song as a new edition with instructions to the OSUMB members: “Some of these [songs] may be offensive to you. If so, you can either ignore them, or you can suck it up, act like you got a pair and have a good time singing them.”  The disturbed OSUMB found a moral equivalence with obscene attacks in contempt of human rights and a form of “courage.”  Responsible for Equality And Liberty declares that contempt for our shared universal human rights and dignity is not any form of courage at all.  It is nothing less than the epitome of cowardice.

R.E.A.L. has also posted representative public comments to the Wall Street Journal on this disgrace by Americans respecting human rights and dignity from average citizens as: Aviva Sucher, John Butler, Jeffrey Sonheim, David Perez, Douglas Wasserman, Steven McDonald, and Jerry Knoski. In Jerry Knoski’s comment rejecting such contempt for the Holocaust, one of the replies he gets back is “Don’t ever watch ‘The Producers’! It may even make you laugh.”

As Jeffrey Sonheim writes, this “kind of hatred, once tolerated, then gets the nerve to become a tiny bit more open, Then ever so slowly cascades into total openness as hatred finds a home.” Closing his comment, most appropriately, with “When do you intend to grow up?”

Ohio State University Marching Band (OSUMB) Had Song Mocking the Holocaust
Ohio State University Marching Band (OSUMB) Had Song Mocking the Holocaust and Nazi Killings of Jews

The OSUMB band was brought to Washington, D.C. four times to march in presidential inaugurations.

The existence of the OSUMB band “parody” song book first came to light in July 2014, after an investigation into the band’s culture.  In 2014, the band director, Jonathan Waters was fired, after what the investigation found was a “deep culture of sexual harassment and sexualized behavior existed in the band.”  The report also stated “many if not all of the traditions predate Waters.”  In the report, it also indicated that a mocking nickname for one of the Jewish members of the band was used.

OSUMB Band Leader Jonathan Waters was Fired After "Sexual Environment" Discovered
OSUMB Band Leader Jonathan Waters was Fired After “Sexual Environment” Discovered (Source: AP)

The Wall Street Journal could not reach former OSUMB band director Jon Woods, who was band director in 2012 according to the WSJ, for comment.  Jonathan Waters was the assistant band director and been with the band since 2002.

Dr. Jon Woods, Leader of the Ohio State University Marching Band in 2012
Dr. Jon Woods, Leader of the Ohio State University Marching Band in 2012

Three words for the OSUMB and its leaders:  SHAME ON YOU.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands by the B’nai B’rith in its condemnation of this “satire” mocking the Holocaust, as R.E.A.L. stands in defiance of all racist symbols of hate.  As R.E.A.L. protesters were recently told to our faces by a young man in Maryland at our protest on Nazi symbols, some people find the Holocaust appropriate for “comedy” and “mocking.”  R.E.A.L. and adult people of conscience do NOT.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty stands in solidarity with every word of B’nai B’rith and their report on this disgusting mocking of the Holocaust.

B’nai B’rith has stated in a press release:

“B’nai B’rith International is highly offended by the despicable Ohio State University marching band’s Holocaust-inspired song called ‘Goodbye Kramer.’ The song, sung to the tune of Journey’s ‘Don’t Stop Believin’,’ references Nazis looking for Jews living in attics and Jews traveling by way of cattle car, to their deaths at Nazi concentration camps.  The song was discovered in an updated version of the band’s highly controversial songbook exposed in 2014 after a school investigation into the band’s culture. An initial report discovered the book that had been a long held secret with songs centering on bestiality, rape and homophobia. A follow-up investigation revealed ‘Goodbye Kramer’ was added to the band’s repulsive repertoire in 2012, as was another song denigrating the University of Nebraska. It is never acceptable to trivialize Holocaust imagery. To do so in a jovial tone and completely for the sake of offending is even more abhorrent. The Ohio State marching band has long been dubbed ‘The Best Damn Band in the Land,’ but this sort of behavior does nothing to back up that title.”

While adult people of conscience reject the OSUMB members support for hate “songs,” the Nazi / Confederate group Stormfront’s members are pleased by the OSUMB’s actions.  Stormfront members regularly call for and praise terrorist attacks on the United States of America, including praise of the Nazi terrorist James Von Brunn’s attack on the Washington DC U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Stormfront Nazis were pleased to hear about OSUMB’s hate songs mocking the Holocaust, and one of the comments on the Nazi hate blog stated: “Of course they don’t give what the lyrics were in the article but I would like to hear them. The point is the holycaust has had its day as a sympathizing sucking machine that everyone bows down to as a religion. The fact is the holycaust has become a joke.”

Stormfront Hate Group Members Praise OSUMB for Their Mockery of the Holocaust (Source: Screenshot)
Stormfront Hate Group Members Praise OSUMB for Their Mockery of the Holocaust (Source: Screenshot)

This is what those who demean the atrocity of the Holocaust and Stormfront Nazis have in common – the normalization of Nazi atrocities and figures.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) believes that support for our universal human rights begins with recognizing the need to have a moral conscience towards atrocities and towards hateful languages against minority groups.  The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, signed by the nations of the world on December 10, 1948, begins with recognizing that “disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind.

There are white Americans who have privileged lives where the need for such a conscience has been replaced with only the needs for their own momentary amusements.  There are white Americans who have grown up learning about the “relativity” of world events and history, rather than a genuine understanding of human rights, ethics, morality, and respect for their fellow human beings.  R.E.A.L. believes this toxic culture must change, and we urge parents and adults to set an example on such issues and to take a stand to be responsible for equality and liberty.

DC: “March for Remembrance” on Holocaust Remembrance Day

On April 11, 2010, per our previous report, volunteers in Washington DC held a “March for Remembrance” to commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom HaShoah).  The event was led by event representative Ted Pearce, who sought to have such a march with Christians, Jews, and others in solidarity together to show united remembrance of the Holocaust.

"March for Remembrance" April 11, 2010 - Washington DC
"March for Remembrance" April 11, 2010 - Washington DC

Ted Pearce has led similar marches in Germany and in Texas.   He stated that “if only Jewish people remember the Holocaust, then I fear that in some ways the Holocaust has already been forgotten by some,” which is why he organized this latest “March for Remembrance” in Washington DC.

Ted Pearce Organizes Marchers at the Beginning of Washington DC "March of Remembrance"
Ted Pearce Organizes Marchers at the Beginning of Washington DC "March of Remembrance"

TOS Ministries, based in Germany, has led such events in the past.  TOS Ministries-Germany Pastor Jobst Bittner is the founder of “The March for Life,” and spoke at the Washington DC event in German with an English translator about confronting and challenging anti-Semitism in Germany.  TOS Ministries’ Pastor Bittner spoke about forming a church with a mission to confront and change attitudes on anti-Semitism in Tubingen, Germany, which had a past in the Nazi regime.  Pastor Bittner spoke about the efforts to combat anti-Semitism and to speak out about the Holocaust in Germany, including holding public Hanukkah services and holding marches in Germany to remember the Holocaust, like the march that was now being held in Washington DC on April 11, 2010.

TOS Ministries-Germany Pastor Jobst Bittner Speaks of Defying Anti-Semitism in Germany
TOS Ministries-Germany Pastor Jobst Bittner Speaks of Defying Anti-Semitism in Germany

Other speakers at the March for Remembrance included Avi Mizrachi (Foundation for Holocaust Education Projects), Paul Argiewicz (Holocaust survivor, liberated from Buchenwald, April 11, 1945), Peter Loth (born in Stuttot concentration camp), and David Goldkorn (survived death march from Dachau).

Holocaust survivor Paul Argiewicz spoke of his time in Nazi concentration camps and urged the world never to forget the Holocaust.  Paul Argiewicz was a Polish Jewish teenager who was forced to leave his home, schooling, and family due to Nazi anti-Semitism and spent five years in Nazi forced labor camps from Auschwitz to Buchenwald as Number 176520.

Holocaust Survivor Paul Argiewicz Speaks
Holocaust Survivor Paul Argiewicz Speaks

The message was reinforced by all attendees that the Holocaust would be remembered, and that it would be each of the attendee’s responsibility, whatever their religion, to ensure that the world will Never Forget, so that we can all be responsible for ensuring “Never Again.”   Organizer Ted Pearce stated that that the event would be continued as an annual tradition on Yom HaShoah in Washington DC.   After the speakers, there was a lighting of 6 candles in memory of the 6 million who were killed in the Holocaust.  At a separate event that night, Immanuel’s church in Silver Spring, Maryland held a “Concert of Remembrance.”

Other Photographs of Event:

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April 11 – Washington DC: Holocaust Remembrance Day – “March of Remembrance” to Capitol

On April 11, Jews and Christians will together hold a “march of remembrance” in Washington DC to remember the Holocaust.   The details about his march can be found at: marchofremembrance.com

National Mall, Washington D.C.

10:00 am  – Pre-Event gathering on the Mall. Opportunity to visit the Holocaust Museum.
12:00 pm –  Gather on the Mall (see map)
12:15 pm –  Silent Prayer Walk to the U.S. Capitol Building
1:00 pm   –  Main Event  (Testimonies and Prayer) on the West Lawn of U.S. Capitol

Immanuel’s Church, Silver Spring, MD

6:00 pm – Benefit Concert,  Guest Musicians: Marty Goetz, Ted Pearce and Others. Proceeds to benefit: Helping Hands Collation – caring for Holocaust survivors. Directions: www.immanuels.org

A flier with more specifics is available online (Adobe Acrobat PDF format).


Washington DC: U.S. Capitol Building
Washington DC: U.S. Capitol Building

Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11 – 18

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum reports on Holocaust Remembrance Days in 2010 from April 11 through April 18.

“The United States Congress established the Days of Remembrance as our nation’s annual commemoration of the Holocaust and created the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as a permanent living memorial to the victims. This year Holocaust Remembrance Day is Sunday, April 11. The Museum designated Stories of Freedom: What You Do Matters as the theme for the 2010 observance. In accordance with its Congressional mandate, the Museum is responsible for leading the nation in commemorating the Days of Remembrance, and for encouraging and sponsoring appropriate observances throughout the United States.”

“Observances and remembrance activities can occur during the week of Remembrance that runs from the Sunday before Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah) through the following Sunday (view the Remembrance Day Calendar). Days of Remembrance are observed by state and local governments, military bases, workplaces, schools, churches, synagogues, and civic centers.”

Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11-18, 2010 (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)
Holocaust Remembrance Days: April 11-18, 2010 (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)

January 27 – International Holocaust Remembrance Day

January 27 – International Holocaust Remembrance Day

The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum states that “January 27 marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp. In 2005, the United Nations General Assembly designated this day as International Holocaust Remembrance Day (IHRD), an annual day of commemoration to honor the victims of the Nazi era. Every member nation of the U.N. has an obligation to honor the memory of Holocaust victims and develop educational programs as part of an international resolve to help prevent future acts of genocide. The U.N. resolution that created IHRD rejects denial of the Holocaust, and condemns discrimination and violence based on religion or ethnicity.”

“To commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum hosts a candle-lighting ceremony attended by the Washington, D.C. diplomatic community, Holocaust survivors, and the general public.”

“The United States officially commemorates the Holocaust during Days of Remembrance, which is held each April, marking the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. The Museum is mandated by the U.S. Congress to lead the nation in commemorating this day.”

“Visit http://www.ushmm.org/remembrance/dor/ for more information and resources.”

neveragain

Auschwitz liberation marked on Holocaust Memorial Day

Auschwitz liberation marked on Holocaust Memorial Day
— BBC reports:
“More than a million people died in Auschwitz”
— “Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp survivors have been among those marking the 65th anniversary of its liberation at UK Holocaust Memorial Day events.
— “Many attended a national commemoration at London’s Guildhall, with other survivors of genocide and politicians.”

Photo of Auschwitz (Photo: Getty Images)
Photo of Auschwitz (Photo: Getty Images)

neveragain

To Defy Hate All You Need is Love

In the struggle for human freedom, people will never care how much you know, until they know how much you care.

On Tuesday April 21, as I sat in the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC listening to the names being read of those murdered in the Holocaust – those whose lives were taken just because of who they were, I saw how much the readers truly cared. The reading of the names of the Holocaust victims was done by diverse people each with a list. The readers were young and old, Caucasian and black, Asian and other ethnic backgrounds, women and men. But they had one thing in common – they all cared. The Holocaust was over 60 years ago, certainly some may have still known some victims, but many did not. And still they cared – they stopped their day to remember. Some cried. One young Asian girl could barely make it through the list of names through her tears.

We don’t cry enough, and that is so sad for the human race. We need to cry a lot more often. We have gotten so tough; I fear sometimes that our hearts are becoming stones. We see the endless cacophony of horror stories against humanity around the world, and our hearts get so tough. The losses just become nameless numbers, another news story, and we forget how horrible it truly is. Many of us just can’t face it. We avert our eyes, change the subject, change the channel, and turn off our hearts. We choose to forget what those numbers mean as a “coping” mechanism. But denial of human suffering is an unhealthy and inhuman “coping” mechanism that we need to leave behind as a mature society. We need to grow up and face the real “monster in the closet” that is the suffering of humanity and the shared human threat of institutionalized hate.

We need to spend more time with our hearts and remember that our fellow beings aren’t just numbers. So as they read the names, I saw them in front of my eyes. The brothers and the sisters, the mothers and the fathers, the loners, the brave, the desperate, and most of all the helpless children – as I listened to each name – I saw their lives extinguished one by one like the flames of candles.

Over 6 million… human beings. And every one – was somebody. They weren’t a number, they weren’t a statistic, they weren’t a “fiction,” and they weren’t just “victims.” Each one was a HUMAN BEING. Each one was a person whose life was stolen by institutionalized hate.

In the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Hall of Remembrance, where the names of those murdered were read on April 21, phrases from the Torah have been placed on the walls. One was from Deuteronomy 30:19, concluding “Choose Life – that you and your offspring shall live.” Until we accept the value of our fellow human beings and show love to each other, we will continue to fail to grasp this fundamental message in choosing life over institutionalized hate, choosing life over denial of human suffering, and choosing life over craven indifference to our fellow human beings. In choosing life, we also recognize that our lives do not begin and end with just our own personal happiness, but extend to our responsibilities to love our fellow human beings as our neighbors, brothers, and sisters in humanity. We have a choice – we must choose life in humanity loving our fellow human beings. Choose life and choose love.

When humanity is threatened by institutionalized hate of its universal human rights, it is our responsibility to speak out. It is our responsibility to act in defending the human rights of our fellow human beings. If we choose life as part of the human race, then we must share the obligations and responsibilities in protecting the human rights of our brotherhood and sisterhood of humanity.

“Silence is death” is the message of the North Korea Freedom Coalition that is also remembering an estimated 3 million North Koreans that have died under North Korea’s brutal dictatorial regime since the mid-1990s, and who continue to die today. Again – every one… was somebody – they were a human being.

The North Korea Freedom Coalition is holding a rally at the West front of the U.S. Capitol in Washington DC on Tuesday April 28 at 12 noon; it will have a North Korea genocide exhibit on display. The North Korea Freedom Coalition is trying to remind us that the genocide of humanity continues to happen today. This rally is part of “North Korea Freedom Week,” which is a series of events planned in the Washington DC metropolitan area to raise awareness about the North Korean totalitarian government’s attack on humanity.

Many in America’s governmental leadership are deeply concerned about the efforts of the North Korean government and its leader Kim Jong Il in developing nuclear weapons. Our diplomats have sought to negotiate with North Korea on these tactical security issues of grave importance. But we will never have any type of security that isn’t built on a foundation of respecting the universal human rights of equality and liberty. We will never successfully negotiate a “security” position with a Communist nation like North Korea while it starves its people, denies them human rights, and holds its citizens in concentration camps. We will never successfully achieve “peace for our times” with North Korea while it holds humanity’s fundamental rights in contempt.

While many of us say “Never Again” to the Holocaust, in fact genocide is happening again – in North Korea, in Sudan, and in many parts of the world. This is why we must accept the lesson that “Never Again” means promoting love for our fellow members of humanity and their universal human rights.

On Sunday April 26, I was privileged to join supporters of the North Korea Freedom Foundation at a candlelight vigil at the International Calvary Church in Springfield, Virginia – a suburb of Washington DC in Northern Virginia. If you ever want to meet a group of people who truly “fear no evil,” this is where to find them. They held a candlelight vigil to remember and pray for North Koreans who have been beaten to death and publicly executed, and the policies of North Korea and Communist China that have resulted in the murder of these individuals. Like the names read out at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, each one murdered was also somebody – each one was a human being whose life was also stolen by institutionalized hate – Lol Kil Sung, Ms. Ko Mae Hwa’s daughter, Lee Ock, Kim Jin Ock, Sohn In Kuk, and many others, including countless others we don’t know if they are alive or dead.

At the vigil and prayer service, I was privileged to see defectors who stood fearlessly to show their commitment to human rights, and I was privileged to meet a true champion of human rights, Suzanne Scholte, who has led the efforts of the North Korea Freedom Foundation coalition in campaigning for human rights in North Korea. At a banner in the International Calvary Church, its members are told to “Love Neighbor,” even as thousands of their neighbors are indifferent to the suffering of the millions of North Koreans. As many testified on April 26 during the vigil and service, the answer to the institutionalized hate of the suffering North Korean people – is love. Love is the universal language of humanity.

Many believe that Communist totalitarianism in North Korea, Communist China, and other nations is about statist “control,” not hate. This confusion shows how much we still have to learn as human beings about our shared responsibility for the universal human rights of equality and liberty. Just like Hitler’s Nazi Germany, Communist totalitarianism also hates humanity. Communist totalitarianism hates humanity because it completely rejects the truth of humanity’s universal human right to liberty. Communist totalitarianism doesn’t hate because it controls — it controls because of its hate and contempt for humanity’s most fundamental right of liberty.

Institutionalized hate seeks to control human beings and deny their universal human rights of equality and liberty, because love is really a dangerous thing for them. If you love your fellow human being, how can you deny their equality, their liberty, their freedom? Institutionalized hate can’t tolerate such love, because when people start loving each other then they will start calling for each other’s human rights, and institutionalized hate just can’t have that.

Now as someone with a degree in political science, I will tell you that we political science types have fancy names for the different shades of institutionalized hate. We like to call such institutionalized hate names such as totalitarianism, supremacism, and whatever-you-want-to-call-it “ism.” I know that I do it, and that’s what happens when you get a political science degree. We do that because the study of political science is to understand diverse political systems, behavior, and philosophies – and that is how we catalog variations of institutionalized hate. What we don’t do is universally recognize such anti-humanity ideologies of repression as institutionalized hate.

But as a human being, I will also state that there really is no meaningful difference between the shades of institutionalized hate, no matter what we want to call it. As human beings, we must not get caught up only in the detailed political science argument or the right-left argument, and miss this fundamental point. There is no real difference between “right wing” hate and “left wing” hate; there is no difference between “racial” or “religious” hate. There is no difference between the atrocities of the Nazis or the atrocities of the Communists. Murder is murder. Hate is hate. Institutionalized hate is the same – no matter what political, racial, social, or religious label that it chooses to wear. Institutionalized hate is the common enemy of all of humanity.

This is why we can’t “choose our battles” when defying institutionalized hate. An attack on our human rights anywhere is an attack on our human rights everywhere. When we believe that we can only care about the human rights of those like us, or only those whose cause we find appealing, then we miss the point. It is our consistent responsibility for equality and liberty and our consistent commitment to love our fellow human beings that is the foundation for challenging institutionalized hate. We cannot love one another, and be indifferent to institutionalized hate in areas that are “not our cause.” Our love for humanity, like our human rights of equality and liberty, must be universal. So must be our action in defying those who would deny such universal human rights.

For example, many people would rather ignore that Communist China practices such institutionalized hate of humanity through its denial of universal human rights. It is terribly inconvenient for many people, and certainly inconvenient for many business interests. Communist China’s history of Communist totalitarianism, repression, concentration camps, and brutal treatment of its citizens is an inconvenient truth for many Americans who depend on products and goods developed by a repressed Chinese people who are denied such universal human rights. Turning a blind eye to Communist China’s atrocities is a good “business” practice for many.

Too many ignore the Communist Chinese government’s history of murdering 20 to 80 million of its own citizens through Mao Zedong’s policies of repression, the Communist Chinese government democide, and Mao’s intimidation of dissent leading to murderous famines resulting from the “Great Leap Forward.” In Mao: The Unknown Story, Jung Chang and Jon Halliday estimate that perhaps 27 million people died in prisons and labor camps during Mao Zedong’s rule. Once again, every one… was somebody – they were a human being.

Too many ignore the Communist Chinese government’s Laogai forced labor concentration camps that continue to exist today, which the Laogai Research Foundation states there are 1,045 such concentration camps holding an estimated 6.8 million prisoners. I challenge those who believe in human freedom to look at the map of these Communist Chinese concentration camps and say that we believe in “Never Again.” I challenge those who believe that such concentration camps exist only in history to visit the Laogai Museum, located at 1109 M St. NW, Washington DC, and see the reality for themselves.

Too many ignore the endless series of atrocities from Communist China – the organ harvesting of prisoners, the forced abortions, and the affront to the dignity of human bodies by selling and displaying human corpses. Too many believe that human rights in Communist China are not a priority for America’s foreign policy objectives.

I ask you – would you buy a product labeled “Made in Nazi Germany”? If not, then why is it any DIFFERENT for a product “Made in Communist China”? We need to recall our ambassadors of denial, ignorance, and amorality from representing America in globalism. We need to restore conscience to capitalism. “Never Again” does begin with love for humanity and our consistent responsibility for its universal human rights.

Twenty years ago, in 1989, something important happened in Communist China. Something happened that we must never ever forget. In the capital city of Beijing and in other parts of Communist China, its citizens began to call for freedom on April 14, 1989. For a time, the power of human freedom was rekindled in the hearts of the Chinese people. From April 14 through June 4, 1989, protests were held for freedom around China and in a place known as Tiananmen Square. To those of you who are old enough remember, I hope that the very words “Tiananmen Square” make your heart ache and make your eyes water. We must remember the Tiananmen Square where students of freedom stood up to Communist soldiers, where students of freedom chose to go on a hunger strike, and where students erected a brief statue to liberty that looked so achingly like our own. We must remember the Tiananmen Square where those who stood for the love of humanity’s universal rights of freedom paid the ultimate price for defying hate, and many died on June 3 and 4, 1989. Finally, we must remember the Tiananmen Square where, on June 5, 1989, a solitary man stood against a row of tanks. One fearless hero of freedom loved his fellow man and his country that much. One unarmed man stood with nothing but his defense of freedom.

Some things you never forget.

So it saddens my heart, during this time of remembrance of those who stood against institutionalized hate in Communist China, to see so many who seem to be so readily willing to forget.

On May 5, at the Washington DC embassy of the ironically named “People’s Republic of China,” an organization named the Institute for Education (IFE) is holding a “Civility Award” cocktail reception and dinner at this Communist Chinese embassy. The IFE seeks to “foster civility” and “intercultural understanding.” Tickets to the dinner at the Communist Chinese embassy cost between $1,000 and $50,000. According to the IFE, a series of notable individuals are listed as confirmed “opinion leaders” who will be attending this exercise in “civility” with the Communist Chinese ambassador at the embassy. You will no doubt recognize many of the names listed by the IFE: Tom Friedman (The New York Times), Bob Woodward, David Broder (The Washington Post), Eleanor Clift (Newsweek), Ed Henry (CNN), Judy Woodruff (PBS), John Harwood (CNBC), Jerry Seib and Gerard Baker (The Wall Street Journal), Morton Kondracke (Roll Call), Hugo Gurdon (The Hill), Juan Williams, Jim Angle, and Jennifer Griffin (FOX News), Norm Ornstein (American Enterprise Institute), and Congressman Mark Kirk.

If this doesn’t give you an idea of the depth of our bipartisan, national problem in consistently being responsible for equality and liberty, I don’t what will.

The adults going to the May 5 cocktail reception and dinner at the Communist Chinese embassy aren’t some young teenagers who never heard about the Tiananmen Square massacre of 20 years ago. Most of them remember – all of them know. More importantly, they know better.

The IFE will argue that this cocktail reception and dinner is to spread “civility.” I disagree. It sends yet another signal of legitimizing and appeasement to the leaders of oppression. It sends yet another message that we will ignore the institutionalized hate that Chinese Communist leaders have for the universal human rights of humanity.

I argue that there is nothing civil about having cocktails with representatives of a Communist totalitarian nation that has over 1,000 concentration camps today. There is nothing civil about legitimizing those who support oppression and those who have contempt for humanity’s fundamental human right of liberty. The civil answer to offers to socialize with totalitarians is “no, thank you, not until you recognize human rights.” I would hope that the “opinion leaders” listed by the IFE come to this conclusion, and I urge you to contact them and ask them to publicly boycott this event on May 5. Perhaps they could truly serve as opinion leaders on issues that really matter.

I can still be civil and speak for human equality, liberty, and justice. You will see me doing so on June 4 at the Communist Chinese embassy. But I will be outside, on the street, where I belong – with free people, not inside legitimizing totalitarianism. I will be outside remembering those millions who have lost their lives to Communist China and remembering those who lost their lives in the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. I will be outside the Communist Chinese embassy as I was on June 4, 1989 in support of the Chinese martyrs for freedom then. I hope you will join me. We are all responsible for equality and liberty.

Civility truly does matter – but it starts with love for your fellow human being. If you love your fellow human being, then you have no choice but to defy those who would hate them, and you have no choice but to defy institutionalized hate of the universal human rights of equality and liberty.

If we must defy hate with love, we must not even hate the oppressors in their civil war against humanity itself.

The cancer of hate attacks all who are touched by hate, even those who advocate it. In the disease of hate against humanity, the practitioners of hate are also victims themselves. That is why we must pray for and we must plead with them to see the error of their ways. We must seek them to end their institutionalized hate against humanity and rejoin the family of human beings. In challenging institutionalized hate, we must acknowledge the humanity of even the oppressors and the hatemongers, and it is with our love of humanity that we plead for them to change.

We must also acknowledge that those who are indifferent to such human suffering are also in our family of humanity. While we may be hurt by their indifference, we must consistently show our love to remind them that they are our brothers and sisters in humanity.

Love is the foundation of all human rights. None of us should claim to have all of the answers to humanity’s problems. But we know that the answer to most problems starts with love.

You intuitively know what’s right. Your children know what’s right. You know what is right begins with love. Your heart knows that our love for each other is the foundation of our natural human rights. We need to start listening to our own hearts.  By loving our fellow human beings, we find no choice but to defend their human rights. We need to find the courage to make ourselves consistently responsible for such human rights in our lives.

We are all part of something bigger than ourselves – the human race. No matter our religion (or lack thereof), no matter our race, no matter our gender, national origin, etc., we are all human beings. We are all part of one family of humanity. You don’t choose your family of humanity. It includes those who are brave and those who are afraid. It includes those who seek freedom and those who oppress. Regardless of all of their differences, they remain your family of humanity. We are all a part of each other. When you hate members of your family, you hate a part of yourself. Hate is never an answer to hate. Indifference is never an answer to indifference.

There is only one answer to hate and indifference towards the universal rights of your family of humanity – the answer is love.

Ultimately, Love Wins.

For details of what you can do in our common cause, see RealCourage.org.


Poland: Young Jews march in memory of Holocaust victims

(Poland) Young Jews march in memory of Holocaust victims
— “Thousands of young Jews and elderly Holocaust survivors marched Tuesday at the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz to honor those who perished in the Holocaust, while an Israeli official condemned the Iranian president’s recent anti-Israel comments.”
— “Ahmadinejad, who has denied that the Holocaust happened and has called for Israel’s destruction, accused the Jewish state in his speech of being a ‘most cruel and repressive racist regime.’ His official text had referred to the Holocaust as ‘ambiguous and dubious’ but Ahmadinejad dropped that reference from his speech.”

Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah) – Tuesday April 21

Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah)
Tuesday April 21, 2009
Days of Remembrance April 19-26

“The Holocaust was the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945. Jews were the primary victims — six million were murdered; Gypsies, the handicapped, and Poles were also targeted for destruction or decimation for racial, ethnic, or national reasons. Millions more, including homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Soviet prisoners of war and political dissidents, also suffered grievous oppression and death under Nazi tyranny.”

As part of the 2009 National Days of Remembrance Events, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) is holding its annual Names Reading Ceremony on Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah),
April 21, from 10 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. in the Hall of Remembrance, located on the Museum’s Second Floor. For more information, please email volunteerview@ushmm.org or call 202-479-9737

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM)
100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW
Washington, DC, 20024-2126
— to get there take Washington Metro to Smithsonian subway stop
walking directions from Smithsonian to Holocaust memorial museum

  1. Exit station through 12TH ST SW & INDEPENDENCE AVE SW entrance.
  2. Walk approx. 3 blocks W on Independence Ave SW.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) Days of Remembrance
Online USHMM Exhibitions
Organize a Holocaust Remembrance Day
Holocaust Encyclopedia
Historical photos
Download stickers to print and hand out during your ceremony
Facebook – United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM)
USHMM YouTube Videos

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