Speaking at Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony in Jerusalem's Yad Vashem memorial, Prime Minister says Israel must be prepared to defend itself modern enemies, such as Iran and its proxies Hezbollah and Hamas.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Benjamin Netanyahu Holocaust Iran HamasThe threats Israel faces to its existence are real, not theoretical ones, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during the ceremony opening Holocaust Remembrance Day in Jerusalem on Sunday, urging the world not to ignore the threat posed by Iran's nuclear ambitions.
Speaking of the three main lessons Israel must learn in the Holocaust's wake, Netanyahu spoke first of the danger which lies in ignoring the threats of those "wishing to annihilate us," saying Israelis "mustn't bury our heads in the sand."
"Has the world learned this lesson? I doubt it. Have we learned it? I believe we have," Netanyahu said, adding, however, that "we must admit that "in the history of the Jewish people we have not always excelled in anticipating the future, sometimes repressing the bleak reality before us."
Referring further on the ability to anticipate coming catastrophes, Netanyahu said that while "many in the world, at least in the enlightened world, treat the memory of the Holocaust respectfully and seriously," that attitude, however, "recalls generals preparing for the previous war."
"It seems easier for the world to discuss the lessons of the past than implement those to the present and the future," the premier said, adding that "the Jewish people mustn't ignore the Holocaust's lessons today."
"Because today, new enemies are rising, and as they deny the Holocaust, call for the destruction of our people," the PM said, adding that "Iran, and its proxies Hezbollah and Hamas are openly working to destroy the Jewish state."
Speaking of the world's response to such an effort, Netanyahu said that all "cultured citizens of the world, those who say they are implementing the lessons of the Holocaust, should denounce in no uncertain terms those wishing to destroy the Jewish state, and even arming themselves with nuclear weapons in order to realize those ambitions."
"The threat to our existence isn't a theoretical one, it cannot be minimized, it stands before us, before all of humanity, and it must be stopped," he said.
The second lesson, according to the premier, "stems from the fact that attacks on our people were always preceded by waves of hatred which prepared the ground for those attacks," insisting on the need "to expose the true face of the hate against our people."
"Today too there are people who charge the Jewish state with responsibility for all of the world's ills, from rising gas prices to regional instability," Netanyahu said.
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