From the DW:
“Romania to open first national
Holocaust museum”
Romania had long swept under the
rug its role in the Holocaust. The museum is meant to educate and raise
questions about the country's role in the deaths of Jews and Roma during the
time it was allied with Nazi Germany. Romania's President Klaus Iohannis on
Tuesday approved the creation of the country's first Holocaust museum in
Bucharest aimed at informing the public and shedding light on the Nazi-allied
regime's role during World War II. "The history of Jewish Romanians, their
contribution to the country's development and the tragedy experienced during
the war... represent a legacy which was hidden from us for decades,"
Iohannis said Tuesday at a ceremony attended by Holocaust survivors. "This
museum will not so much bring answers as raise more questions," he added. "The
Romanian state demonstrates consistency in meeting the goal aimed at recovering
the memory of the Holocaust, strengthening the education about the Holocaust
and combating anti-Semitism," Iohannis said.
Elie Wiesel's role
The country had long downplayed
any role in the Holocaust, but in 2004 an international panel led by Nobel
Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel estimated that between 280,000 and 380,000
Romanian and Ukrainian Jews perished from territories under Romanian
administration. It also found 11,000
Roma were killed. Only 3,200 Jews still live in Romania, according to the last
census in 2011. The new museum, coordinated by the Elie Wiesel Institute for
the Study of the Holocaust in Romania, will be located in an eight-storey
building in central Bucharest. Romania switched sides in the war in 1944. The
communist regime that later followed did little to uncover crimes committed
during the Holocaust.
^ It’s important for Romania (and
every other country in the world) to remember its dark past. Romania was allied
with Nazi Germany and helped them with the Holocaust in Romania and with other
things during the war. Having a Holocaust Museum in Romania is long over-due (by
7 decades.) Hopefully the Museum will help educate Romanians about their
country’s role in the Holocaust as well as why it was covered-up for so long. ^
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