Nisan 27 – Yom HaShoah

Nisan 27, 5784; from sunset May 4, 2024, to sunset May 5, 2024

Holocaust Remembrance Day in Israel was made official by the Knesset in 1951. It commemorates the victims of the Holocaust where one third of the Jewish people were murdered by Nazi Germany (Wikipedia). As we did with our remembrance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day in January, we’ll read Psalm 102, as it appears to have been composed specifically for the victims of the Holocaust. Today we remember those who were “appointed to death.”


This is an image of the Isaiah bulla. A bulla is a clay seal which was impressed onto a cord tied around a document. These bullae were hardened when the Babylonians burned the Temple in Jerusalem. It was discovered in 2009 and, though portions of it are missing, the full inscription is believed to read: “Belonging to Isaiah [the] Prophe[t].” It is the first archaeological find offering proof of the prophet’s existence.

Yad Vashem

Yad Vashem is the name of the main Holocaust memorial and museum in Jerusalem.  It originates in a verse found in the book of the prophet Isaiah:

[To] them will I give in my house and within my walls a [memorial] and a [name], better than sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting [name], that shall not be cut off [from memory].

Naming the Holocaust memorial “yad vashem” [literally “a hand (yad) and a name (vashem)”] conveys the idea of establishing a national depository for the names of Jewish victims who have no one to carry their name after death.  The original verse referred to eunuchs who, although they could not have children, could still live for eternity with the Lord. (Wikipedia)

Let’s look at this verse in context:

Thus says the LORD:  “Keep justice, and do righteousness, for My salvation is about to come, and My righteousness to be revealed.

Blessed is the man who does this, and the son of man who lays hold on it; who keeps from defiling the Sabbath, and keeps his hand from doing any evil.”

Do not let the son of the foreigner who has joined himself to the LORD speak, saying, “The LORD has utterly separated me from His people”; nor let the eunuch say, “Here I am, a dry tree.”

For thus says the LORD:  “To the eunuchs who keep My Sabbaths, and choose what pleases Me, and hold fast My covenant, even to them I will give in My house and within My walls a place (yad) and a name (vashem) better than that of sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off.” – Isaiah 56:1-5 (NKJ)

The majority of Jews who died in the Holocaust were of Ashkenazi descent.  According to Wikipedia, the term “Ashkenazi” refers to Jewish settlers who established communities along the Rhine River in Western Germany and in Northern France dating to the Middle Ages.  To learn more about the significance of the name Ashkenaz, please see our post “Altar of the Holocaust.”


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