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Remarks on the Occasion of the 20 th Anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide-Toronto April 2014 We share a common understanding We have both felt the pain of a hole burnt into our hearts. The month of April, at this time, is sacred to both Jews and Rwandans. Next week the Jewish community will pause to remember the brutal murder of 6 million Jewish men, women and children by the Nazi Hordes. Today you pause to remember the murder of over 800,000 Tutsis and Hutu moderates, men women and children brutalized, raped, murdered during 100 days of evil perpetrated by the Hutu Akazu. To the survivors amongst us today, I say, I understand. And to the children of those survivors I say I am ONE with you 1

Remarks on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide: Toronto 2014

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Page 1: Remarks on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide: Toronto 2014

Remarks on the Occasion of the 20 th Anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide-Toronto April 2014

We share a common understanding

We have both felt the pain of a hole burnt into our hearts.

The month of April, at this time, is sacred to both Jews and Rwandans.

Next week the Jewish community will pause to remember the brutal murder of 6 million Jewish men, women and children by the Nazi Hordes.

Today you pause to remember the murder of over 800,000 Tutsis and Hutu moderates, men women and children brutalized, raped, murdered during 100 days of evil perpetrated by the Hutu Akazu.

To the survivors amongst us today, I say, I understand.

And to the children of those survivors I say I am ONE with you

My Father Max was the sole Jewish Survivor of his small village in Poland.

Murdered in the gas chambers of Treblinka were his mother, his father, his 7 brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, And the hurt that never went away his first wife and two young Boys Yitzchak and Sholom, my half brothers

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Page 2: Remarks on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide: Toronto 2014

So you see my dear friends today you and me we are One

it is too late for the murdered Jews of Europe and your brothers, sisters family and friends the annihilated Tutsis of Rwanda.

The world had its opportunity to save them and did too little, too late.

The deeds of those who tried protected our martyrs from persecution, the righteous among the nations, people like General Romeo Dallaire and Raul Wallenberg) represent a flickering spark of humanity in a world that had gone dark.

They offer a sharp rebuke to those who say "we had no choice," or "we did not know," or "it was not our business." No words can bring meaning or sense to the Rwandan Genocide or the Shoah (the Hebrew term for the Holocaust).

But commemoration can bring hope to those who survived and those who remember.

And in so doing, we can at least show the victims of the genocidal madness that their deaths had some effect on us, caused us to reflect, reconsider and even hope.

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Page 3: Remarks on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide: Toronto 2014

We must honour those who were lost with forthright action and a commitment to ensure that never again will the demons of the human spirit gain ascendancy -never again will we turn a blind eye to the torment of others. Many survivors, like my dear father, and so many here today found a haven in Canada.

They were and are the true heroes of this sad epoch in history.

Through their courage, they found the strength to start over again; to build new families and to leave a legacy of hope, love and determination for their children and their descendants to follow. In the end, we must show a fidelity to history and memory.

We do this for ourselves and for those whose echoes were so murderously silenced -for the Yitzhaks and Shaloms -whose still, small voices call out from the grave to all of us to remember.

Today, together we join our memories of pain as a means by which to tell the world YET AGAIN-NEVER AGAIN

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