
Purposeful remembrance is not a slogan—it’s a disciplined way of holding history with honesty, dignity, and care.
Purpose is honesty, not habit
To remember with purpose is to choose accuracy over convenience. It means naming what happened clearly, refusing distortion, and treating people’s lives as more than symbols or statistics.
What to avoid
Purposeful remembrance avoids spectacle, graphic consumption, and “quick takes.” It also avoids vague language that blurs responsibility or minimizes targeted persecution.
What to practice
Start with reliable sources, listen to survivor testimony, and learn enough context to speak precisely. When you encounter Holocaust denial or distortion, respond with calm clarity—and point back to the historical record.
For the dead and the living, we must bear witness.
Elie Wiesel
Watch: Survivor testimony
Video
Books to read (for historical grounding)
- Night (Elie Wiesel) — A first-person account that centers memory, loss, and moral witness.
- Man’s Search for Meaning (Viktor E. Frankl) — Reflections on suffering, meaning, and the human capacity to endure.
- The Diary of a Young Girl (Anne Frank) — A human voice that keeps dignity and personality in view.
Remember6 reflection prompt: What does “purposeful remembrance” require of me this week—in what I share, what I correct, and what I refuse to normalize?









