50 years On, Eichmann on display at the UN (JERUSALEM POST) By MARK SCHULMAN 04/20/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=266841
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UNITED NATIONS – The United Nations marked the Holocaust on Thursday
evening with the opening of an exhibition on the 50th anniversary of
the trial of Adolf Eichmann, one of the key architects of the Final
Solution.
Prominently displayed in the UN’s visitor’s lobby, the exhibition
documents the historic trial through photographs, news clippings and
works of art – from Eichmann´s capture by the Mossad in Argentina in
May 1960 to his execution in 1962.
“In telling Eichmann’s story, this exhibit sends a clear message to
the international community and to each visitor that passes through
these halls,” said Ambassador Ron Prosor, Israel’s representative to
the United Nations. “As we learn what he stood for, we understand
what we must stand against…Eichmann’s trial did more than expose the
past, it taught the world a critical lesson for the future.”
But perhaps that lesson has not yet been fully learned or understood
warned Minister without Portfolio Yossi Peled, a Holocaust survivor
and retired general, with a not-so-veiled reference to Iranian
president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
“Every year, just a few meters from where we are sitting, there is a
president of a UN member state that stands on the podium of the
General Assembly and denies the Holocaust while his government
threatens to carry out another one.”
A 2005 UN resolution rejects any denial of the Holocaust as an
historical event and commends those states which have actively
engaged in the preservation of sites which served as Nazi death
camps, concentration camps, forced labor camps and prisons during the
Holocaust. Two years later, another resolution was passed urging all
UN Member States to reject any denial of the Holocaust. The UN has
also designated 27 January – the day Auschwitz was liberated in 1945 –
as Holocaust Remembrance Day.
It has been 50 years since the Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, but
memories have not faded. Tamar Hausner-Raveh, lawyer and daughter of
Gideon Hausner, the trial’s chief prosecutor, remembered when she was
14 years old the day her father was appointed to the case and
Eichmann entered her life.
“My father shared with us his doubts about whether he could represent
the victims without being a survivor himself,” she said. But, he
found the inner strength as reflected in his opening remarks of the
trial: “As I stand here before you, judges of Israel, to lead the
prosecution of Adolf Eichmann, I do not stand alone. With me, in this
place and at this hour, stand six million accusers.”
The trial was broadcast live, receiving extensive international media
attention, and was open to the public. Eileen Azif, a New York
exchange student studying at Hebrew University at the time, attended
the proceedings for several days.
“I clearly remember the image of this man with headphones [for
translation from Hebrew to German] sitting very still behind a glass
booth, he never moved a muscle,” she recalled.
Mickey Goldman was a member of Israeli Police Bureau 6, which was set
up to prepare witnesses for testimony. “Eichmann never accepted blame
or showed any remorse for his acts, not during the investigation, not
during the trial and not before his death,” he said. “On the day of
his execution, at which I was present, he refused to confess.”
Adolf Eichmann was convicted on 15 criminal charges, including crimes
against the Jewish people and humanity. He was sentenced to death on
June 1, 1962. His body was cremated and the ashes were scattered at
sea, beyond Israel’s territorial waters – very much like the disposal
of the remains of Osama bin Laden by the US in 2011 – in order to
prevent his burial place from becoming a memorial site. The execution
of Adolf Eichmann is the only time that Israel has enacted a death
sentence.
The Eichmann exhibition is one of several events being organized this
week by the Israeli Mission to the United Nations and the UN
Holocaust program. On April 23, there will be a roundtable discussion
on the Eichmann trail with Minister Yossi Peled, Nobel Laureate Elie
Wiesel and Amos Hausner, an attorney and son of the trial’s Chief
Prosecutor Gideon Hausner.
The exhibition, With me are six million accusers: The Eichmann Trial
in Jerusalem, is curated by Yad Vashem. It will be on view at the
United Nations in New York through May 28, 2012. (© 1995-2011, The
Jerusalem Post 04/20/12)
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