
Remembrance matters because truth is contested. When denial and distortion spread, silence becomes a multiplier.
Denial rarely starts as denial
Holocaust distortion often begins with minimization, selective framing, or “both-sides” narratives that erode historical clarity. Purposeful remembrance keeps the record intact and accessible.
Remembrance protects dignity
Remembering is not only about facts—it is about refusing to reduce human beings to numbers. Dignity is preserved when we keep names, stories, and context together.
Remembrance is a present-tense responsibility
We don’t remember to stay in the past. We remember to recognize how dehumanization works—so we can resist it when it reappears.
The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference.
Commonly attributed to Elie Wiesel
Watch: Survivor testimony
- USC Shoah Foundation – Full-length testimonies (playlist)
- Yad Vashem – Video testimonies resource center
Video
Books to read (for historical grounding)
- Maus (Art Spiegelman) — A graphic memoir that shows how memory passes across generations.
- The Holocaust: A New History (Laurence Rees) — A broad historical narrative built on extensive interviews and research.
- Holocaust: An Unfinished History (Dan Stone) — A modern synthesis focused on how we understand the Holocaust today.
Remember6 reflection prompt: What does “purposeful remembrance” require of me this week—in what I share, what I correct, and what I refuse to normalize?









