-
EU launches antitrust probe into Google's data use for AI
-
Cambodia-Thailand clashes spread on border as toll rises
-
Billionaire Trump fan Babis returns to power as Czech prime minister
-
German exports tread water as US, China shipments fall
-
England fast bowler Wood out of Ashes tour with injury
-
South Korea's president begins move back to historic Blue House
-
SEA Games to open in Thailand with tightened security
-
Honduran presidential candidate decries vote 'theft' in race against Trump-backed rival
-
Owners fled after Indian nightclub blaze killed 25: police
-
CERN upbeat as China halts particle accelerator mega-project
-
2025 on track to tie second hottest year on record: EU monitor
-
Chile to vote for president as hard-right Kast tipped to win
-
Chargers edge reigning champions Eagles after defensive show
-
RSF says Israel killed highest number of journalists again this year
-
Suns, Spurs win in last tuneups for NBA Cup showdowns
-
Hay to debut for New Zealand as Blundell out of 2nd West Indies Test
-
World record winning streak sets up Morocco for AFCON challenge
-
All Blacks face France in first Test at new Christchurch stadium
-
Cambodia and Thailand clash at border as civilian toll rises
-
South Korea police raid e-commerce giant Coupang over data leak
-
Most markets track Wall St losses as jitters set in ahead of Fed
-
Kenya deploys more police officers to control Haiti's gangs
-
Somali TikToker deported from US for spy kidnapping may be innocent
-
Indian pride as Asiatic lions roar back
-
Australia quick Hazlewood ruled out of Ashes after injury setback
-
Rising living costs dim holiday sparkle for US households
-
Data centers: a view from the inside
-
Long-serving Russian envoy to North Korea dies
-
Reddit says Australia's under-16 social media ban 'legally erroneous'
-
10 reported hurt after big Japan quake, warning of more tremors
-
Jimmy Kimmel extends late night contract for a year
-
Trump says US will allow sale of Nvidia AI chips to China
-
NBA fines Magic's Bane $35,000 for hurling ball at Anunoby
-
Pulisic quick-fire double sends AC Milan top of Serie A
-
Man Utd back on track after Fernandes inspires Wolves rout
-
Syria's Sharaa vows to promote coexistence, one year after Assad's ousting
-
World stocks mostly lower as markets await Fed decision
-
Palmer misses Chelsea's Champions League clash with Atalanta
-
Trump says Europe heading in 'bad directions'
-
Benin hunts soldiers behind failed coup
-
Salah a 'disgrace' for Liverpool outburst: Carragher
-
Peace deal at risk as DR Congo, Burundi slam Rwanda and M23 advances
-
Feminists outraged at video of French first lady's outburst against activists
-
Suspect arrested in theft of Matisse artworks in Brazil: officials
-
Troubled Liverpool host Barnsley in FA Cup third round
-
Slot has 'no clue' whether rebel star Salah has played last Liverpool game
-
Liverpool boss Slot says Salah relationship not broken
-
Powerful 7.6 quake strikes off Japan, tsunami warning lifted
-
100 abducted Nigerian children handed over to state officials
-
Lula orders road map to cut fossil-fuel use in Brazil
Hamas attacks horrific but unlike Holocaust: Yad Vashem chairman
Many traumatised Israelis have compared the bloody Hamas onslaught of October 7 to the horrors of the Holocaust, but the head of the national memorial to the genocide disagrees.
Dani Dayan, chairman of Jerusalem's Yad Vashem memorial centre, stressed that the attack, although appalling, was fundamentally different from Nazi Germany's mass murder of six million Jews.
"I do not accept the simplistic comparison with the Holocaust even if there are similarities in the genocidal intentions, sadism and barbarism of Hamas," Dayan told AFP.
"The crimes that took place on October 7 are on the same level as Nazi crimes, but they are not the Shoah," said the former Israeli diplomat, using another term for the Holocaust.
Dayan said he understood the revulsion and dark echoes triggered by the Hamas attack that Israeli officials say killed at least 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and saw about 240 taken hostage.
"For any Jew who has heard the stories of families putting their hands over a baby's mouth to stop it from crying, the association of ideas is obvious. We have all thought about it," he said.
Aside from the scale of the events, Dayan pointed to the fact that Jews today -- unlike many during World War II -- are far from defenceless victims, and that the State of Israel has hit back hard.
"We cannot compare it with the period of the Holocaust because there is an army here which is fighting and making Hamas pay the price," he said.
Israel has relentlessly bombarded the Gaza Strip and according to the besieged territory's Hamas-run government killed more than 14,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children.
A temporary respite was in sight as Israel and Hamas have agreed a truce of four days and an exchange of some hostages and Palestinian prisoners, although Israel has maintained it will "destroy" Hamas.
- 'Beheadings, rapes, shootings' -
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others have repeatedly called the Hamas attacks the worst against Jews since the Holocaust -- but Dayan warns against such parallels.
Early on, Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Gilad Erdan, pinned a yellow star to his chest, insisting he would wear it "with pride" as long as the Security Council did not condemn the Hamas "atrocities".
"Some of you have learned nothing in the past 80 years," Erdan said.
"Just like my grandparents, and the grandparents of millions of Jews, from now on my team and I will wear yellow stars," he said.
Dayan at the time wrote in a Hebrew-language post on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, that "this act disgraces the victims of the Holocaust as well as the State of Israel".
"The yellow star symbolises the helplessness of the Jewish people and their being at the mercy of others... Today we will fasten to our lapel a blue and white flag, not a yellow star."
Dayan said he was even more irritated by comments from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who said the Hamas attacks "did not happen in a vacuum", referring to the Palestinians' long plight.
"I asked him what context could explain the beheading of children, rapes or shootings of young people at a music festival," Dayan said.
- 'The fear has returned' -
Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center, was established in 1953, five years after the creation of Israel.
Since October 7, it has cancelled educational seminars and turned some spaces into classrooms for 400 students evacuated from southern Israel.
It was necessary, said Dayan, to "adapt the premises" to the needs of the children displaced by the attacks or evacuated amid the Gaza war.
"We removed the photos from the walls so as not to add trauma to trauma," he said.
The memorial centre itself counts some of its own staff among the victims.
Polish-born Israeli historian Alex Dancyg, 75, who worked at Yad Vashem, was last seen at the Nir Oz kibbutz and is feared to be among the hostages, as is one of the guides, Liat Atzili.
A fellow educator, Shlomo Balsam, also rejected likening October 7 to the Shoah, even as he said "I hear survivors say that it takes them back to that time".
Balsam is honorary president of Aloumim, an Israeli organisation for Holocaust survivors who were hiding in France during the war.
Some members, now very old, met at Yad Vashem and discussed both their childhood memories and their fears for the hostages, and for grandchildren serving as soldiers in Gaza.
"Children held hostage alone in Gaza are like us when we were abandoned alone during the war," said one octogenarian, Meira Bursztejn-Barer.
Berthe Badehi, 91, who survived the war hiding in a farmer's house, said the fear she felt at the time had returned.
This time around, she said determinedly, "we will emerge victorious".
A.Seabra--PC