The Holocaust, by definition, as the topic of any conversation, never brings with it good news. The systematic murder of European Jewry was unspeakable while it was happening, and the passing decades have brought with it little comprehension or insight. It has never progressed beyond the unfathomable.
Moral clarity that emanates from inhumanity is a dead end.
Whether the topic is Auschwitz, the gas chambers, shaved heads, or numbered arms, those train tracks always led, then as much as now, to a black hole. And so all efforts to remember it, while historically imperative and, for Jews, a tribal necessity, come with no reassurances that another Holocaust could not be reprised. The global rise in antisemitism, and the familiar fate of and indifference toward the Uyghurs of China, offer unsubtle premonitions.
With each passing year, there are fewer surviving witnesses. And Holocaust memory—whether in diminished Yom HaShoah commemorations or the transgressive ways it has been trivialized or transformed into kitsch—has lost the solemnity it once had.
That’s why International Holocaust Remembrance Day arrived at such an inauspicious time this year. Swastika graffiti was discovered at Union Station (of all symbolic locales) in Washington, D.C. on that very day. On the eve of the day, a Tennessee School Board voted unanimously to remove the Pulitzer-Prize-winning graphic novel “Maus” from its curriculum, citing inappropriate material.
Yes, the Holocaust, all of it, was inappropriate!
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made a tortured analogy between the fascist forces that impelled Anne Frank and her family into that Dutch attic, and governmental vaccine mandates from which he and many more have been trying to hide. Speaking of Anne Frank, a recent segment on “60 Minutes” featured a forensic discovery that may have cracked the decades-long cold case of how the Gestapo came to know where Anne and the others were hiding. It turns out, the betrayer may have been one of their own: an Amsterdam Jew who served on the Jewish Council and was trying to save his family by condemning all but, ultimately, Otto Frank, Anne’s father, to their deaths.
Just a few short weeks ago, a broadcast journalist compared Dr. Anthony Fauci (arguably no saint) to Dr. Josef Mengele, the notorious Angel of Death at Auschwitz. Perhaps in a culture that laughed at a “Soup Nazi” on “Seinfeld” and satirized the meaning of “survivor” (reality TV show or concentration camp inmate?) on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” where Donald Trump was continually compared to Adolf Hitler, and where America’s police are routinely accused of adopting Gestapo tactics, no one should be surprised that the iconography of the Holocaust has lost all meaning.
And it’s getting worse. The Holocaust has been an unfashionable topic for a number of years now. It doesn’t fit easily into the cultural zeitgeist of identity politics, and even worse, it completely undermines woke doctrine. And for many, the killing of Jews is simply beside the point. On many campuses, the Holocaust has been referred to as an unworthy subject for the course curriculum—an example of “white on white crime,” which is really no crime at all.
Among progressives, the Holocaust, to put it bluntly, is politically incorrect. It is an appeal to a misdirected sympathy for a people who enjoy all the privileges attendant to their whiteness. Minority status is an illusion in their case, a true token. Auschwitz is all smoke and mirrors. Historical persecution must be forgotten; present-day antisemitism of no special concern.
Among progressives, the Holocaust, to put it bluntly, is politically incorrect. It is an appeal to a misdirected sympathy for a people who enjoy all the privileges attendant to their whiteness.
Left up to the Squad, International Holocaust Remembrance Day would be an excuse for a mattress sale.
Indeed, “Never Again,” “man’s inhumanity to man,” and “those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it”—the signature rallying cries of Holocaust remembrance—have been reduced to empty slogans, plaintive sighs, nostalgia for a time when the world suffered from less amnesia.
Nowadays it’s all a whimper, followed by a whitewash. The accelerating era of the ho-hum Holocaust has degenerated from somber reflection to anything goes. The “too soon” prohibitions of the comedy circuit have all expired. Fortunately, the lampshade bit hasn’t found its way into anyone’s act. But if it did, expect no social justice warrior to hand out a woke red card for insulting the Six Million.
One event that coincided with International Holocaust Remembrance Day that went wholly unmentioned was the retirement of Justice Stephen Breyer, who served as a federal jurist, and in other public service, for over three decades with great distinction. And he brought a most amiable and cultivated presence to the Supreme Court. Yet, somehow amid all the testimonials, no one bothered to highlight that he was a proud American Jew.
Back when Jews were seen as a marginalized minority, the appointment to the Supreme Court of such august jurists as Louis Brandeis, Felix Frankfurter, Benjamin Cardozo and Arthur Goldberg were openly regarded as symbols of ethnic advancement and American pluralism.
Justice Breyer’s retirement was not referenced as a Jewish milestone at all.
Why?
Perhaps because Jewish assimilation has been accomplished with such perfection, whiteness is now the primary identifying characteristic of being Jewish-American—not ethnicity, or historical persecution, the ghettos of Europe, the Pale of Settlement and the once impoverished Lower East Side, or even academic and professional success. Jews today are far more likely to be blamed for Israeli policies than applauded for their resurrection after a genocide less than 80 years ago.
Jews today are far more likely to be blamed for Israeli policies than applauded for their resurrection after a genocide less than 80 years ago.
In today’s political culture with its intersectional sleight of hand, Breyer’s identity was, bizarrely, evidence of a Supreme Court lacking diversity—a white man in a black robe. Indeed, a little over a year ago, few remarked that one-third of the High Court was comprised of Jews (Breyer joined by Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Elena Kagan)—yes, white skinned, but adding diversity to the Court and ruling, ideologically, as a liberal bloc.
Now there is just one. And, still, no one takes notice.
Ho-Hum Holocaust Day
Thane Rosenbaum
The Holocaust, by definition, as the topic of any conversation, never brings with it good news. The systematic murder of European Jewry was unspeakable while it was happening, and the passing decades have brought with it little comprehension or insight. It has never progressed beyond the unfathomable.
Moral clarity that emanates from inhumanity is a dead end.
Whether the topic is Auschwitz, the gas chambers, shaved heads, or numbered arms, those train tracks always led, then as much as now, to a black hole. And so all efforts to remember it, while historically imperative and, for Jews, a tribal necessity, come with no reassurances that another Holocaust could not be reprised. The global rise in antisemitism, and the familiar fate of and indifference toward the Uyghurs of China, offer unsubtle premonitions.
With each passing year, there are fewer surviving witnesses. And Holocaust memory—whether in diminished Yom HaShoah commemorations or the transgressive ways it has been trivialized or transformed into kitsch—has lost the solemnity it once had.
That’s why International Holocaust Remembrance Day arrived at such an inauspicious time this year. Swastika graffiti was discovered at Union Station (of all symbolic locales) in Washington, D.C. on that very day. On the eve of the day, a Tennessee School Board voted unanimously to remove the Pulitzer-Prize-winning graphic novel “Maus” from its curriculum, citing inappropriate material.
Yes, the Holocaust, all of it, was inappropriate!
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made a tortured analogy between the fascist forces that impelled Anne Frank and her family into that Dutch attic, and governmental vaccine mandates from which he and many more have been trying to hide. Speaking of Anne Frank, a recent segment on “60 Minutes” featured a forensic discovery that may have cracked the decades-long cold case of how the Gestapo came to know where Anne and the others were hiding. It turns out, the betrayer may have been one of their own: an Amsterdam Jew who served on the Jewish Council and was trying to save his family by condemning all but, ultimately, Otto Frank, Anne’s father, to their deaths.
Just a few short weeks ago, a broadcast journalist compared Dr. Anthony Fauci (arguably no saint) to Dr. Josef Mengele, the notorious Angel of Death at Auschwitz. Perhaps in a culture that laughed at a “Soup Nazi” on “Seinfeld” and satirized the meaning of “survivor” (reality TV show or concentration camp inmate?) on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” where Donald Trump was continually compared to Adolf Hitler, and where America’s police are routinely accused of adopting Gestapo tactics, no one should be surprised that the iconography of the Holocaust has lost all meaning.
And it’s getting worse. The Holocaust has been an unfashionable topic for a number of years now. It doesn’t fit easily into the cultural zeitgeist of identity politics, and even worse, it completely undermines woke doctrine. And for many, the killing of Jews is simply beside the point. On many campuses, the Holocaust has been referred to as an unworthy subject for the course curriculum—an example of “white on white crime,” which is really no crime at all.
Among progressives, the Holocaust, to put it bluntly, is politically incorrect. It is an appeal to a misdirected sympathy for a people who enjoy all the privileges attendant to their whiteness. Minority status is an illusion in their case, a true token. Auschwitz is all smoke and mirrors. Historical persecution must be forgotten; present-day antisemitism of no special concern.
Left up to the Squad, International Holocaust Remembrance Day would be an excuse for a mattress sale.
Indeed, “Never Again,” “man’s inhumanity to man,” and “those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it”—the signature rallying cries of Holocaust remembrance—have been reduced to empty slogans, plaintive sighs, nostalgia for a time when the world suffered from less amnesia.
Nowadays it’s all a whimper, followed by a whitewash. The accelerating era of the ho-hum Holocaust has degenerated from somber reflection to anything goes. The “too soon” prohibitions of the comedy circuit have all expired. Fortunately, the lampshade bit hasn’t found its way into anyone’s act. But if it did, expect no social justice warrior to hand out a woke red card for insulting the Six Million.
One event that coincided with International Holocaust Remembrance Day that went wholly unmentioned was the retirement of Justice Stephen Breyer, who served as a federal jurist, and in other public service, for over three decades with great distinction. And he brought a most amiable and cultivated presence to the Supreme Court. Yet, somehow amid all the testimonials, no one bothered to highlight that he was a proud American Jew.
Back when Jews were seen as a marginalized minority, the appointment to the Supreme Court of such august jurists as Louis Brandeis, Felix Frankfurter, Benjamin Cardozo and Arthur Goldberg were openly regarded as symbols of ethnic advancement and American pluralism.
Justice Breyer’s retirement was not referenced as a Jewish milestone at all.
Why?
Perhaps because Jewish assimilation has been accomplished with such perfection, whiteness is now the primary identifying characteristic of being Jewish-American—not ethnicity, or historical persecution, the ghettos of Europe, the Pale of Settlement and the once impoverished Lower East Side, or even academic and professional success. Jews today are far more likely to be blamed for Israeli policies than applauded for their resurrection after a genocide less than 80 years ago.
In today’s political culture with its intersectional sleight of hand, Breyer’s identity was, bizarrely, evidence of a Supreme Court lacking diversity—a white man in a black robe. Indeed, a little over a year ago, few remarked that one-third of the High Court was comprised of Jews (Breyer joined by Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Elena Kagan)—yes, white skinned, but adding diversity to the Court and ruling, ideologically, as a liberal bloc.
Now there is just one. And, still, no one takes notice.
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
Congregation Beth Israel: Fond Memories of My Childhood Synagogue in LA’s Fairfax District
A Moment in Time: “When Losing an Hour Inspires Holiness”
A Bisl Torah — The Story You Need to Tell
Is Religious Knowledge Receding or Revealed via Tephilllin, Phylacteries?
Dutch Mistreat: Anti-Zionists in the Netherlands Tried Disrupting My Zoom Lecture
Dancing While The War Raged On – A poem for Parsha Vayakhel-Pekudei
Suspect Dead after Car Crash, Shooting at Detroit-area Reform Temple, Largest in North America
The director of security at Temple Israel was injured in the attack, the Reform congregation said.
Print Issue: The Year Everything Changed | March 13, 2026
Crazy as it might sound, it all started with the Dodgers, and how they won back-to- back World Series in 2024 and 2025. That year, with those two championships on either end, is the exact same year l became a practicing Jew. And I don’t think that’s a coincidence.
Rabbi Jerry Cutler, 91
In 1973, he founded Synagogue for the Performing Arts, drawing the likes of Walter Matthau, Ed Asner and Joan Rivers.
Racing Back to War: Israelis Stranded Abroad Desperate to Return Home
From Los Angeles to Thailand, Israelis are sitting anxiously, waiting for a notice from El Al or other airlines, hoping for a chance to board a flight back to Israel.
Healing Through Play: Mobile STEAM Unit Delivers Trauma Relief to War-Affected Communities
We are delivering hands-on learning and building resilience for a generation growing up under conflict in a region that lacks a dedicated children’s museum.
Friday Night Star – Spicy, Saucy Salmon
We made this recipe Passover-friendly because who doesn’t need an easy one-skillet dish that is healthy and delicious!?!
Pies for Pi Day
March 14, or 3/14 is Pi Day in celebration of the mathematical constant, 3.14159 etc. Any excuse to enjoy a classic or creative pie.
Table for Five: Vayakhel
Funding The Mishkan
The Light of Wonderment: A Letter to My Sons
Crazy as it might sound, it all started with the Dodgers, and how they won back-to-back World Series in 2024 and 2025.
Rosner’s Domain | Why Israelis See the War Differently
American malaise involves gloomy thoughts about spiking gas prices, or depressing flashbacks to previous wars where days stretched into decades. Israeli malaise is accompanied by gloomy thoughts about the Americans.
God: An Invitation
No single philosophical system can contain God.
For the Dogs? The Delightful Surprises of Jewish Medieval Art
Canines’ renowned loyalty was a natural representation of the “loyal transmission of the divine mandate from generation to generation.”
Honoring Palestinian Women Terrorists on International Women’s Day
Even those self-described human rights groups that are strongly biased in favor of the Palestinian Arab cause acknowledge the PA’s systemic mistreatment of women.
It Didn’t Start with Auschwitz
Jews today do have a voice. For the moment. But we have not used it where it counts – in the mainstream media, the halls of power, on campuses, on school boards, in the public square.
Regime Humiliation: No, You Won’t Destroy Israel
After years of terrorizing Israelis with existential threats, the Islamic regime is now worried about its own existence. In a region where the projection of power is everything, that is humiliation.
Congress Must End Institutional Immunity That Allows Officials to Act With Impunity
Congress has already established this principle for corporate America; it must apply the same standard to education, where vulnerability and the risk of exploitation are high.
After Barrack and Perelman Jewish Day Schools, a Hard Question for American Jewish Life
The generation that built these schools believed Jewish life in America had a future worth institutionalizing. Are we willing to invest, sacrifice and build accordingly?
The War in Iran and the Long-Term Relationship with America
There is a golden opportunity to expose the intellectual bankruptcy of antisemitism based on current identity politics discourse, and to credibly argue that the current struggle is a global confrontation between the forces of terror and oppression and the Free World.
Ladino Shabbat at Sinai
On a recent Shabbat, Sinai celebrated the Ladino tradition and invited me to tell my story.
An Open Letter to First Lady of New York City
Public gestures matter. When someone in a position of influence treats atrocity as liberation, the signal travels far beyond a social media post.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.