Friday, January 27, 2012

Germans Mark Holocaust Day

From Deutsche Welle:
"Germany marks Holocaust Memorial Day with an appeal not to forget"

Germany marked Holocaust Memorial Day on Friday with a special session of parliament and a call for the nation's citizens never to forget the danger posed by right-wing extremism. The president of the German parliament called on Germans to actively stand up to all forms of right-wing extremism, speaking on the 67th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp. "It is these people who set an example and demonstrate courage," Bundestag President Norbert Lammert said in remarks commemorating International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The Memorial Day falls on the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz by Soviet forces on January 27, 1945. His comments follow a move to set up a parliamentary inquiry into a series of murders of nine foreign immigrants and a policewoman by an underground neo-Nazi gang. This week, a survey conducted in Germany also found that 20 percent of Germans had latent anti-Semitic feelings. "That is 20 percent too many," said Lammert. In a moving speech in the Bundestag, the prominent Polish-born German literary critic, Marcel Reich-Ranicki, reminded parliament of the systematic torture and organized mass murder of European Jews launched by Germany under Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler. Reich-Ranicki, who is 91 and frail, grew up in a Jewish family and later survived the Nazi purge of the Warsaw ghetto. "They had only one goal; they had only one purpose - death," he said referring to Nazi claims at the time that they were simply resettling Jews. The Germans set up the Warsaw ghetto in November 1940, cramming hundreds of thousands of Jews into the district under appalling conditions. Most of those who survived that fate soon found themselves confronted with another: the transportation to death camps, like Auschwitz and Treblinka. The Nazis finally burned the Warsaw ghetto to the ground in April 1943. Prior to his appearance in the Bundestag, Reich-Ranicki told the Jüdische Allgemeine newspaper that he had mixed feeling about his speech. "I don't know if I can do it, if I am up to the task to talk about the fate of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto. A day never goes by without thinking about it," he said.

^ It is good that Germany continues to officially recognize and remember the Holocaust since the Germans were the ones who planned and carried it out. This year more should be done regarding the government report that states that 1 in 5 Germans are anti-semitic. There are still thousands upon thousands of Germans alive today that were 18 or older in 1945 and helped (either actively or passively) the Nazis to carry out the murder of millions upon millions of innocent of men, women and children. While Germany has done a good amount in the past few years to bring former Nazis to trial more still needs to be done. ^

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,15699031,00.html

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