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3rd
Sunday in Ordinary Time, Cycle A
Terranova
Hermitage
January 23,
2017
Lessons
from the Holocaust
By (Rev.
Msgr.) Nicholas P. Amato
The Holocaust Museum: Lessons
Last Saturday, one week ago today/yesterday, I
visited the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.
Many of you may have visited it. I had never been there before.
As you know, the Museum is a memorial
especially to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust in the 1940s. This genocide by the Nazis killed 6 million
Jews.
The Holocaust eventually included other
targets, like citizens of Poland and the Soviet Union, gypsies, homosexual and
disabled persons and others. The Nazis
exterminbated a total of 11 million people.
As I slowly walked through the Museum, I found
myself sad, in disbelef, in horror, and at times I became aware that I was just
shaking my head NO! It is just too hard
to imagine this.
Well, that experience quickly put me in touch
with some thoughts that have been maturing in me over the last year or so. I have boiled these down to two reflections
and I want to share them with you today.
1. Words Are Powerful
My first reflection is that our words are
powerful
The words we speak and the words we write or
text or email – these can be very powerful.
We need to be aware of this.
For example, have you ever said something and
the moment it is out of your mouth, you wish you could take it back? Maybe in frustration, we said to a teenager: “You’re never going to amount to anything.”
Or to someone: “You’re a lazy, self-centered waste!” Or: “You’re
a good-for-nothing blankedy blank.”
Our words can help a person develop and grow. Or they can freeze a person right where they
are and even send them backwards.
Our words can build up self-estemn and
self-confidence. Or they can tear it
down and injure someone for a lifetime.
Our words can give positive vision to a group
or community. Or they can lead those
same people to harmful ways.
So, I am suggesting, we have to pause,
reflect, and go within ourselves before we speak. We have to get in touch with our true inner
self and with God who is within us.
We have to consider the effects of our words
for today and tomorrow and the future.
And then, we have to decide what to say and when to say it and how to
say it.
So, knowing that our words have such power is very
important. We need to use our words in a
mature and holy way.
2. Negative Stereotypes Are
Destructive
My other reflection is related to the first.
Negative stereotyping is always destructive. And it is always wrong.
This is what happened in Nazi Germany and what
caused the Holocaust. Thoughtless and
hurtful words were applied to the Jews.
These words and labels led to negative
stereotyping. In that instance, we know
the horrific results.
Some scholars tell us that negative stereotyping
arises from the human temptation to scapegoat.
We make another person or an entire category of persons the scapegoat
for our problems.
So, we need to resist negative stereotyping of
others. Today, it might be directed to Syrian
refugees or Hispanic immigrants, to women or African Americans, to members of
the LGBTQ community or to Muslims.
We need to have the inner strength not to paticipate
in this. In fact, we need to label it as
morally wrong.
Conclusion
Instead, we are to follow the way of Jesus. In today’s gospel, Jesus calls the first
apostles to follow him.
Jesus calls us to do the same. But following him means more than coming to
Mass and receiving the Eucharist.
And one thing for sure that it means is that we use
the power of our words constructively and caringly. And it also means that we resist negative
stereotyping and treat all persons as God’s daughters and sons.
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