On the 70th
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, the world remembers the millions of
victims of the Holocaust. Six million Jews, and also homosexuals, gypsies and
communists, were murdered by Nazi Germany.
Deutsche Welle, 27 Jan 2015
Concentration camp uniform |
In Berlin
on Tuesday, President Joachim Gauck will lead a commemoration at the Bundestag
parliament before joining leaders and government officials of 39 other
countries at the former Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland.
There,
along with three former Auschwitz prisoners who will represent some 300 remaining survivors, they will remember the 1.1 million people who were gassed,
beaten to death, shot or who died from disease and hunger at Auschwitz as part
of the Nazis' so-called "Final Solution" genocide plan under Adolf
Hitler.
The camp
was liberated by the Soviet Red Army on January 27, 1945.
In all, the
Nazis killed six million of pre-war Europe's 11 million Jews, using a network
of 24 main extermination centers and 1,000 ancilliary sites located across
Nazi-held continental Europe during World War Two.
Also In
Berlin, a commemoration by the Memorial Foundation for the Murdered Jews of
Europe will take place, and a memorial will also be held by the Lesbian and Gay
Association (LSVD) to remember homosexuals who became victims of the Holocaust.
Call
against racism
Romani
Rose, the chairman of the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma told the
Catholic Press Agency on Tuesday that the 70th anniversary of the liberation of
Auschwitz should be a powerful call against xenophobia and racism.
"Because
the Holocaust is and will remain a component of German and European history, a
responsibility has grown to protect democracy and the rule of law, today and
always," Rose said.
Referring
to the increase in support for the German anti-Islamization group PEGIDA in
recent months, Rose described its participants as racists "trying to
divide society by creating a picture of Muslims and non-Germans as the
enemy."
Poignant
relevance
Speaking at
a memorial service on the eve of the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the
infamous death camp on Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that
Auschwitz was a symbol of the "collapse of civilization" perpetrated
by Nazi Germany.
"We
must not forget," the chancellor said. "We owe that to the many
millions of victims."
At the same
time, Merkel said that it is "wonderful" that more then 100,000 Jews
now live in Germany, but criticized the treatment to which some people subject
them:
"It is
a disgrace that people in Germany are harassed, threatened or attacked if they
somehow identify as Jews or if they take the side of the State of Israel,"
she said.
ksb/bw, ipj (Reuters, AP, AFP, KNA)
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