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Transcript

Memory as pretext is betrayed memory

In conversation with Stephen Kapos

Stephen Kapos is a Holocaust survivor, a human rights activist, and one of the mor powerful voices inn the Jewish response to the Israeli genocide in Gaza. His public intervention is not grounded in ideological positioning or political alignments but in a the personal memory forged in the crucible of the brutal history of the 20th century. By his own account, an inescapable ethical responsibility: not to remain silent in the face of dehumanization, whoever commits it.

In the interview, Kapos explains that his position does not seek to equate tragedies or trivialize the Holocaust. On the contrary, it is based on a clear premise: memory ought not be neither an identity asset nor a political pretext but a permanent warning about what happens when violence is normalised and civilian suffering is justified. From that standpoint, he denounces the genocide in Gaza and the treatment of the Palestinian population in Israel.

His testimony exposes a central tension of our time. Gaza is not only a geopolitical conflict; it is an ethical test for those who invoke and build their moral identity on the lessons of the holocaust as a universal principle. In that context, Kapos’s voice reminds us that neutrality in the face of mass suffering is not prudence, but moral abdication—and that memory, if it serves any purpose at all, is meant to unsettle power, not shield it.

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