- Having worked at the USHMM in Washington
DC and researching the Holocaust I have learned the following: there has been
great debate over the past 70+ years on whether to celebrate Holocaust
Remembrance Day on January 27th or in April/May. Some believe it should be when
the Soviet Red Army liberated the Jews from Auschwitz (January 27th) and others
believe it should be in April/May when the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising happened.
January 27th is seen by some – especially the Israelis as when the Jews needed
outside help to stop being “sheep led to the slaughter” while April/May is seen
by people – especially the Israelis as when the Jews knew what was going to
happen to them and decided to die fighting the Germans (the second Masada
Siege.)
(Picture I took of the Gas Chamber at the Dachau Concentration Camp in Germany.)
- International Holocaust Remembrance
Day was designated by the United Nations in 2005 for January 27th every year
(the date the Soviet Red Army liberated Auschwitz.) The date has been
celebrated by the EC/EU since 1950 – mostly due to the Western European Socialist
and Communist Parties wanting to praise and honor the Soviet Communists during
the Cold War.
- Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day is
held in either April or May according to the Jewish Year. This year it starts
at sunset on April 11, 2018 and ends at sunset on April 12, 2018. The Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising lasted from April 19-May 16, 1943 (longer than many countries
had withstood the invading German armies in 1940.)
From July 23-September 21, 1942;
265,000 men, women and children were deported by the Germans from the Warsaw
Ghetto to the Treblinka Death Camp. Those remaining in the Ghetto learned about
the death camps and what happened to their friends and family. On April 19,
1943 (the start of Passover) the Germans started to deport the remaining Jews
to Treblinka and have Warsaw “Free of Jews” before Hitler’s Birthday on April
30th. 13,000 Jews were killed in the
Ghetto during the uprising (some 6,000 among them were burnt alive or died from
smoke inhalation). Of the remaining 50,000 residents, most were captured and
shipped to Treblinka.
- In 1979, the US Congress created the
“The Days of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust (DRVH)” held every
year. It is 8 days of civic commemorations and special educational programs
chosen to include Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day and April 28th when
American soldiers liberated the Dachau Concentration Camp.
- Many European countries have
different, local dates according to what happened in their territory during the
Holocaust.
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