This is a brilliantly conceived and executed diorama; I saw it with very mixed emotions. In a few days it will be Purim, the happiest holiday in the Jewish calender. My granddaughter, Sabra, will make the traditional bread and send some to me and her mother and we will share a glass of Manischewitz over the phone. I wonder how many non-Jews (goyim) know about this holiday or anything else about Jews other than that so many were exterminated during WWII.
C20 was a great century for massacres and racial cleansing, but I doubt that we shall see many dioramas on the Armenian or Hutu or Bosnian massacres As it says in the Torah, there is "A time to weep and a time to laugh; A time to mourn and a time to dance." Perhaps it is time to stop mourning those who died in the holocaust, just as I have stopped mourning those of my family in England who were killed by bombing raids around the same time. Let's see a diorama that looks more like "The Fiddler on the Roof" that instead of "oy vey", says "Mazel tov"!