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7 - Deterritorialising the Holocaust

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Adrian Parr
Affiliation:
University of Cincinnati
Ian Buchanan
Affiliation:
University of Wollongong
Adrian Parr
Affiliation:
University of Cincinnati
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Summary

Remember what Amalek did to you on your journey after you left Egypt … you shall blot out the memory of Amalek from under the heaven. Do not forget!

(Deuteronomy 25: 17–19)

Holocaust survivor Jehuda Elkana publicly announced in 1988 that there is … no more important political and pedagogical task for the leaders of [Israel] than to side with life, dedicate themselves to the future, and not deal constantly with the symbols, ceremonies and lessons of the Holocaust. They must eradicate the domination of this historical memory over our life.

(Cole 1999: 135)

Interestingly, the words of Elkana hauntingly echo those in Deuteronomy, the selfsame phrase underpinning the activities in restless synagogues worldwide during the festival of Purim. When the name of Amalek's descendant – Haman – is sounded everyone boos, hisses, makes noise with a greggar (noisemaker) and stamps their feet (many have the name of Haman written on the soles of their shoes so that when they stamp his name is simultaneously erased). Asserting the complexity of history, both Elkana and Purim festivities position history between two irreducible differences: forgetting and remembrance. During Purim, memory is kept in circulation as a problem taken up anew by each generation; the problem is not one that can be reduced to either the blotting out of Amalek's name, nor the call ‘Do not forget’. Simply put, each generation probes history with the question: how can we be inspired not crippled by memory? And this question is largely a problem of how to deterritorialise the monumentality of history, concomitantly invoking the double becoming of ‘singular memory’.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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