Yom HaShoah | Question 7 | Part 1
This video is part of a series of videos produced by the Office of Rabbi Sacks in partnership with the Holocaust Educational Trust. For further videos and information, please visit www.RabbiSacks.org/Holocaust. This series has been made possible thanks to the generous support of Richard Harris.
Holocaust, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks on Yom Hashoah
To what extent do you think the Holocaust can/should be a key ingredient of Jewish identity? (Q7.1)
April 11, 2020
More from this series:
- Where do you think God was in the Holocaust? (Q1.1)
- Do you have faith in humanity after the Holocaust? (Q1.2)
- Does God care about individual lives…? (Q1.3)
- Do you think the Holocaust represented a failure of humanity? (Q2.1)
- Can we trust people other than ourselves? (Q2.2)
- How can I have faith that God is within each of us…? (Q2.3)
- What do you think the Jewish theological response to the Holocaust should be? (Q3.1)
- How has the Holocaust impacted your personal relationship with God? (Q4)
- What do you think would be a just punishment for the atrocities committed by the Nazis? (Q5.1)
- Is there a concept of a statute of limitations when it comes to the crimes of the Holocaust? (Q5.2)
- What is the difference between vengeance and justice? (Q5.3)
- To what extent do you think the Holocaust can/should be a key ingredient of Jewish identity? (Q7.1)
- Do you think it’s ever possible to forgive the perpetrators of the Holocaust? (Q6)
- Is there something unique about the Holocaust practically? (Q7.2)
- Is there something unique about the Holocaust theologically? (Q7.3)
- From your own perspective as a Jew, where do you find hope in the history of the Holocaust? (Q10)
- How do you think the Holocaust can have an impact on interfaith relations today? (Q9)
- Should a Jewish theological response to the Holocaust include issues of justice? (Q3.2)
- How do you see the relationship between the Holocaust and Israel? (Q8)
- Where do you think God was in the Holocaust? (Q1.1)