As Elie Wiesel, a recognized Holocaust survivor, stated, “It all happened so fast. The ghetto. The deportation. The sealed cattle car. The fiery altar upon which the history of our people and the future of mankind were meant to be sacrificed.” The unimaginable experiences which European Jews faced during the Holocaust are just one of the many reasons the Holocaust must be remembered by all. In fact, Primo Levi, Kitty Hart-Moxon, and President Obama used their platforms to encourage Holocaust remembrance. Although Primo Levi’s poem “Shema” and Kitty Hart-Moxon’s Holocaust commemoration speech used convincing ethical appeals relating their Holocaust experiences, President Barack Obama’s speech at the Holocaust Days of Remembrance Ceremony made the strongest argument promoting Holocaust …show more content…
Obama alluded to “Protestant and Catholic children attending school together in Northern Ireland” in paragraph nineteen as being a hopeful sign for the outlook towards the future of Holocaust remembrance. The reference to the separation of Northern Ireland, due to their religious differences, was utilized by the President to indicate how there is notable promise for unity in the aftermath of even the most divisive situations, exemplified by the Northern Irish schoolchildren. Another subjugating regime which Obama mentions in paragraph nineteen of his speech is the “movement to save Darfur that has thousands of high school and college chapters in 25 countries… united in common cause with suffering brothers and sister halfway around the world.” The mention of the Darfuri people in other nations peacefully protesting to aid their kin being tortured and killed in eastern Africa captures the essence of how the say of activists against persecution can be the spark which begins the flame of the prevention of repeated genocidal