"This week, Jewish people around the world come together in synagogues, community centers and schools to commemorate the Kristallnacht – the night of broken glass. We do this to remember what happened on those fateful nights, which mark the beginning of what would become known as the Shoah; the Holocaust.
In Hebrew, the word for 'remember' is 'Zachor'.
But Zachor doesn't just mean to recall the events of the past.
Zachor means to learn the lessons of the past.
Zachor means putting those lessons into practice.
And, Zachor means honoring those who live on in our memory.
Ladies and gentlemen,
On Wednesday November 9, 1938, the Nazi SS paramilitary forces, aided by German civilians, unleashed a pogrom against the Jews of Berlin, Vienna, Prague, and cities across the heart of Europe.
They dragged Torah scrolls through the streets; torched over one thousand synagogues; vandalized Jewish homes, businesses and cemeteries; and murdered nearly one hundred Jews. During those two nights, as many as 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and deported to concentration camps.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
What occurred on those nights in November marked a warning sign for all that was yet to come...
In the 70 years since the end of World War II and the liberation of the concentration camps, racial prejudice and violence still live on.
Within living memory of the murder of 6 million European Jews, antisemitism has returned to the streets of Europe – the violence is new but the targets are the same: Just this year, in January, four Jewish men were killed in an attack on a Kosher supermarket in Paris.
In April, vandals in Copenhagen smashed the window of a Kosher deli and wrote the words 'Jewish Pig' on the wall.
And in June, antisemitic profanities were painted on the gates of a London Jewish primary school.
In light of the ongoing violence we must ask ourselves:
Have we truly followed the principle of Zachor? Have we remembered the lessons of the past?...
This stone that you see here is a remnant from the Great Synagogue in Munich which was set aflame the night of Kristallnacht.
This stone represents one of the darkest times in human history, and the history of the Jewish people.
If you look closely, you will see there are burn marks from that fateful night. These markings of hatred and antisemitism are, in a very real sense, the cornerstone of this institution, which was established to 'to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war'.
The state of Israel was founded with the same promise, to ensure that never again will the survival of the Jewish people be threatened.
It is our hope, and the assurance of our future for generations to come.
Am Yisrael Chai. Long live the people of Israel."