Desecrating the Memory of Millions
"It is mind bogglingly inappropriate to pose for bathing suit photos and videos at a site where people go to mourn, honour and remember those who were murdered in the Holocaust.""People cannot claim ignorance [of the purpose of the Holocaust memorial].""I think what it points to is a lack of understanding about the Holocaust in our society."Andrea Freedman, CEO, Jewish Federation of Ottawa"The Holocaust, at best, is given two lessons [World War II curriculum taught in Ontario public high schools], and it all depends on the teacher.""Canadians have a very limited knowledge of the Holocaust because it's not taught properly in the schools...""We feel Canadians have a moral obligation to remember the past."Mina Cohn, chair, Centre for Holocaust Education and Scholarship, Ottawa
National Holocaust Memorial Photo: National Capital Commission |
Once
again the Canadian Holocaust Memorial has been selected by
discriminating photographers as the perfect site for a fashion shoot.
The shock value of its sere, forbidding raw cement colour and texture
with a seductive pose assumed by a fashion model showing off the latest
fashion creations has led to such shoots on a number of occasions. Ms.
Freedman is partially correct when she states that people cannot claim
ignorance of the purpose of this solemn memorial, but yet their actions
identify them as morally ignorant.
Professional
photographers are well aware of signal monuments and places of diverse
photographic architecture to use as backdrops highlighting the human
figure in pose. Those with an utter lack of scruples gravitate to any
background surface that will illuminate and contrast with the objective
they wish to cultivate with their choices. To be noticed, even if with a
subtle frisson of shock. Some of the perpetrators of this assault on
the sensibilities of a solemn memorial express remorse.
Others
refuse to be intimidated by the fact that they have sullied their own
moral intelligence by this type of selection, and defy a social and
ethical requirement to apologize and withdraw the offending photographs
from public view. "If taking a photo with grey walls as a backdrop is a crime, lock me up,"
Ottawa photographer Mikey Calds wrote, in April of 2022 adding that he isn’t the first person to shoot there and
won’t be the last. "I’m not taking down my work."
This
week again an Ottawa-based photographer posted YouTube videos of a
bathing suit fashion shoot. Because the photographer apologized and
acted immediately to remove the material, his name has been withheld.
Montreal clothing designer Michele Beaudoin posted pictures to
Instagram of a woman in a revealing dress at the monument in August of
2018, later deleted.
In
September of 2018 a survey of 1,100 Canadians commissioned by the
Azrieli Foundation, found fifty percent of Canadians were unable to name
a single Nazi concentration camp, not even Auschwitz, Treblinka or
Belzec, the most infamously 'famous' among the hundreds that were
installed in Nazi-occupied Europe. Again, fewer than half interviewed
were able to identify that six million Jews were annihilated during the
Holocaust. A monumental state-compelled monstrosity in relatively recent
history.
Canada
was among very few Western nations that failed to erect a memorial to
the horrifying genocide meant to destroy all of Europe's Jews, the
'Final Solution' that Fascist Germany under Adolf Hitler was fanatically
committed to. In the process, committing untold resources to the
gruesomely inhumane project while conducting a world war with its Axis
partners with the intention of establishing a 'pure Aryan' world
domination.
An
18-year-old University student felt this lack of acknowledgement
through a national monument was unworthy of Canada, and she set about
lobbying federal politicians for appropriate legislation to be enacted
for one to finally be erected. Through a private member's bill launched
by a Conservative Sikh Member of Parliament, Tim Uppal, that law was
enacted. Private subscription and federal funding made the memorial a
reality and it was inaugurated in 2017.
At
the opening ceremony, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his entourage
'forgot' to mention that the murdered Europeans for whom the memorial
had been built, were Jews. And nor did any of the plaques installed
outside and within the memorial identify the millions of victims as
Jews. This 'oversight' by politicians and the country's leader himself
as good an illustration as any of the importance of remembering that
horrendous mass atrocity, overlooked by most Canadians...
The National Holocaust Monument THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld |
"I would say, 'Tell me why you did it here. For God sakes, you're in the nation's capital, there are so many wonderful places where you could do a shoot like this. I don't know exactly what the nature of the pictures were. I've heard that they were more appropriate for the beach than anything else, but there's beaches here too! You could have done it there.""But thank God for a public which has stood up and said, this is not appropriate. It's not a crime, but it's not appropriate -- use your brains.""Make sure that if you see, even a snippet of insensitivity or insult toward someone, because of whatever, what their faith is -- take the appropriate action of reminding them that you're blessed to live in a country like this, [and that they should not] take advantage of it, [but] use it as an opportunity to grow and to share."(The late) Rabbi Reuven Bulka, 2018 incident
Labels: Canada, Desecration Fashion Photo Shoot National Holocaust Memorial
<< Home