Zichronam L’vracha

Tonight marks the beginning of Yom Hashoah, “Holocaust Memorial Day.” This year Tuesday, April 29, 2003 corresponds with 27 Nisan 5763, and the twelfth day of the omer. This day was set aside by the Israeli Knesset in 1951 to be observed as Yom Hashoah v’Haguvrah, Day of the Destruction and Heroism. Though the reason for marking this particular day is not known, it is likely that it was specifically place during the omer which is already a mournful period in the Jewish year. One possibility is that it symbolized the fall of the Warsaw Ghetto, just a few weeks after the anniversary of the uprising. In Israel, places of entertainment are closed on the evening of Yom Hashoah.

Many people observe the holiday remembering the six million Jews who were murdered in the Shoah by attending special memorial services or candlelight vigils. With them we should also remember Chasidei Umot Ha-olam, the righteous non-Jews who gave their lives in attempts to save members of the Jewish people.

Yom Hashoah Related Events
These Are the Names: A Commemoration for Yom Hashoah, NYC
Holocaust Memorial Day National Event, Edinburgh, UK
Yom Hashoah 2003, Virginia
New England Holocaust Memorial

Holocaust Museums and Memorials
Yad Vashem, Jerusalem
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Holocaust Museum Houston
CANDLES Holocaust Museum, Indiana
Florida Holocaust Museum
The Virginia Holocaust Museum
Holocaust Memorial Center, Michigan
LA Holocaust Monument
Holocaust Center of Northern California, San Francisco
The Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust

For further reading, Jew*School recommends:
Yom Hashoah @ JTS
Zichronam Livracha*
MyJewishLearning.com
“Seasons of Our Joy” by Arthur Waskow
“The Jewish Way: Living the Holidays” by Irving Greenberg

*This site was created by Anagraztov in 1997 for ThinkQuest, an international High School web design competition.

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"I may attack a certain point of view which I consider false, but I will never attack a person who preaches it. I have always a high regard for the individual who is honest and moral, even when I am not in agreement with him. Such a relation is in accord with the concept of kavod habriyot, for beloved is man for he is created in the image of God." —Rav Joseph Soloveitchik