Statement on SAJFP Picket at the Cape Town Holocaust and Genocide Centre (CTHGC)
10 August 2024
On Friday, 9 August, South African Jews for a Free Palestine held a picket outside the Cape Town Holocaust and Genocide Centre (CTHGC). The picket was mostly silent, but included Jewish prayers and songs for peace, such as “Lo Yisa Goy” (whose lyrics translate to “nation shall not take up sword against nation, never again will they know war”) and the Mourner’s Kaddish (an ancient prayer for those who have died). We decided to hold this picket after numerous failed attempts at engaging the Centre about their silence on the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Friday marked the end of a six-day conference hosted by the Centre titled “Building Resilience Through Holocaust & Genocide Education”.
The Centre has been utterly silent on Gaza. It has failed to acknowledge the thousands of Palestinians killed by Israel, and the dehumanisation tactics that have primed the world to turn their backs on plausible genocide. However, it is not only to note an omission that we are taking a stand against this Centre. The Centre’s silence on the atrocities in Gaza is a poignant indication of how dangerous education can be when it becomes an instrument of a violent political ideology.
On the surface, this violence may seem at odds with the education offered by the CTHGC. On its website, the Centre claims that a core purpose of Holocaust education is to “draw attention to the dangers of indifference, apathy and silence.” The Centre does not only teach about the Holocaust but other genocides and human rights violations such as the Rwandan Genocide, the Holodomor in Ukraine and Apartheid.
However, when digging deeper into the Centre’s approach, it becomes clear that their education is far from universal in its spirit. For example, in a talk titled “New realities of Holocaust education” the content omitted any reference to the atrocities — which have been likened to those by the Nazis — being committed against Palestinians. Instead, it reinforced time and time again, how Holocaust memorialisation can be a useful tool to understanding and responding to the events of October 7th.