Q: Why do we celebrate Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance
Day?
A: Not so long ago we remembered the victims of Nazism on
Tisha B’Av, not on a separate day. Tisha
B’Av commemorates the saddest events of Jewish history: the destructions of two
Temples, the exile of our people, the desert wanderings, and the Spanish
expulsion….
Since Tisha B’Av recalls so many tragedies throughout the
ages, it was felt that the holocaust should be folded into its observances of
weeping and fasting.
The immensity of the Holocaust coupled with the proximity
to our lives threatened to turn Tisha B’Av solely into a day of mourning for
the Six Million. In addition, the
enormity of the evil was so profound that the people felt it needed a day of
its own to mourn and remember.
It was agreed that Yom HaShoah should be positioned during
the counting of the Omer, a sober time for all Jews. During those weeks following Passover we do
not perform weddings. The ill-fated Bar
Kochba rebellion was squashed during this period and a plague attacked scholars
under Rabbi Akiva. In keeping with the
solemnity of those weeks, Yom HaShoah was given its own place after Pesach.