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Two
generations have passed since the end of World War II. Today
we live in an age of information, instant communication and
progressive technology. The benefits to be garnered from the
free flow of heterogeneous information - which can be
overwhelming on a day-to-day basis - are counterbalanced by an
unavoidable side effect: the creation of short memories. Young
people today regard the past not in the sense of where they
have come from, but rather as a bygone series of events which
are "past," while they themselves are living
"post." This viewpoint is dangerous in that it is
disjunctive rather than connective.
The world is rapidly advancing toward the close of the second
millenium under the pressure of the cultural universalism
characteristic of an open-market economy, hyper-consumerism,
the world communications revolution and a flood of
boundary-reducing tourism. In the face of this, local cultures
are struggling to maintain their own uniqueness.
The generation that lived through the Holocaust is dwindling.
The presence of witnesses - the remnant who survived - ensured
a certain moral strength; their absence creates a moral,
cultural and educational vacuum.
What will be the fate of Holocaust commemoration among members
of the fourth generation, both Jewish and non-Jewish? What
place will it occupy in the midst of the currents that are
sweeping us along towards the onset of the third millenium?
Will remembrance be meaningful in the context of contemporary
events? How should we prepare ourselves at this historic
juncture?
In the spirit of the Jewish tradition of "Vehigadeta
Lebincha" ("And you will tell your
children"), Yad Vashem
places a heavy emphasis on educating the younger generations
about the Holocaust. More than ever before, today's youth are
expressing a keen interest in their own personal history and
identity. We at Yad Vashem have always believed that it is our
responsibility to provide Jewish youngsters with the history
of the Holocaust from a Jewish perspective. Yad Vashem is addressing this need by
developing the tools needed to perpetuate the dialogue between
past, present and future. Today, new technologies and display
systems expand the horizons of communication. The generation
of the future is immersed in a world of stimulating,
high-impact media. We must relate to the visitors of the 21st
century in their language.
Every visitor leaves Yad Vashem with a personal impression of
an event that has universal dimensions. The new museum complex
reinforces the commitment of Jewish visitors to their
people and their ethical brotherhood with other nations.
Non-Jewish visitors will empathize with the fate of the Jewish
people, and will be inspired to join the drive to a more
humane future for humanity as a whole.
Yad Vashem is the pioneer of Holocaust museums world-wide. By preserving its Jewish
character within the universal context, and yet maintaining an
authentic voice composed of testimonies, diaries, artifacts
and other documentation, Yad Vashem paves the way for a better
future.
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