Alphen, Netherlands. 28
January. Yesterday was Holocaust
Memorial Day, the sixty-eighth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz by Soviet
forces which last year I visited to pay homage to the murdered. Here in the Netherlands Anne Frank wrote “In spite of
everything I still believe that people are really good at heart. I simply can't build up my hopes on a
foundation consisting of confusion, misery and death.” Anne Frank died in March 1945 in
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp days before its liberation by the British 11th
Armoured Division. Almost seventy years
on what does the Holocaust mean for the Europe of today?
The Holocaust or Shoah defines modern Europe
because without wishing to deny the suffering of millions in the 1939-45 European
war it was the murder of six million Jews and others that stalks European
politics to this day and rightly so. The
1957 Treaty of Rome which established the then European Economic Community
(EEC), the forebear of today’s EU, “determined
to lay the foundations of an ever closer union among the peoples of Europe”. It might have added “…to prevent genocide
ever again being committed on Europe’s soil”.
All the human rights legislation overseen by the Council of Europe against
which so many Europeans rail was also inspired by the need to prevent such obscenities. Anti-Semitism, far from being confined to
Nazi Germany, was prevalent across Europe before the war.
As David Cameron last
week finally forced Europeans to begin considering the relationship between
power and people and just what “ever closer union” should actually mean in the
future Europe the Holocaust continues to provide Europe's ghastly context. Like it or not Hitler’s ghost still haunts
latter day Europe and at this tipping in Europe’s history the political balance European
leaders must strike is indeed a delicate one.
Clearly, Europeans have
a special duty of care for the Jewish people but such care must also extend to all
minorities. Indeed, Europe will be
judged by its treatment of minorities, especially at a time of
hyper-immigration, weak economies and the social tensions inevitable at such
moments. Today’s seminal debate on the
future Europe is really about the interaction of globalisation, Europeanisation
and integration and by extension power, structure and liberty.
However, finding a new
European balance is not the same as simply embracing the freedom-eroding mantras
of political correctness that so infects European politics and which is fuelling
new intolerance, new censorships and the new discriminations felt by an increasingly
oppressed majority. The Holocaust must
always inform European politics but not enslave it.
That the Holocaust still defines a historical fault-line in Europe can be seen in the tension between British Euro-realists and Euro-federalists.
Britain was never occupied and never suffered the terror of
occupation. In the Netherlands alone
some 205,000 Dutch people died, the highest proportion in any occupied
territory. Moreover, one only has to
visit certain parts of Central and East Europe to very quickly realise the
importance of the EU as a safeguard against dangerous nationalisms and the
intolerance of minorities. This is something
most Britons simply do not understand.
Indeed, even Britain’s so-called 'pro-EU' lobby simply see the EU as
a means to an end of economic stability, rather than the quintessential historical
end in itself many Europeans believe it to be.
Ironically, both the federalists and realists are deep down driven by the memory of the Holocaust
and the need to ensure it never happens again.
They simply disagree about how. Former Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, who is fast becoming the
champion of federalism, when interviewed last week on the BBC suggested 'peace' in Europe can only be assured by a United States of Europe. For Euro-realists the opposite is needed; a new separation of powers between Brussels and the member-states, in favour of the latter, to
re-establish vital checks and balances that alone can prevent extreme abuse of
extreme power.
Ultimately political liberty must trump guilt however
eloquently history speaks to Europeans.
The Holocaust must not be used as an implicit alibi for an ever closer
union that is really about the undemocratic concentration of too much power in
too few elite hands. When the
Treaty of Rome was drafted the key phrase was an ‘ever closer union of peoples’,
nowhere does it call for an ever closer union of states which is how it has
come to be interpreted by the Euro-federalists.
Europe will continue to
be held to account by its twentieth century history and rightly so. However, Anne Frank is a
heroine of mine precisely because in spite of the horror she endured her spirit
soared alongside her belief in the essential goodness of humanity. “Anne Frank: Diary of a Young Girl”
is now online. Read her, celebrate her and
honour her belief in humanity.
Never again!
Julian Lindley-French
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