Today is International Remembrance Day: 2021 is the 76th Anniversary of the liberation of the German Concentration and Death Camps by the Allies and the end of the Holocaust.
While we
remember the 6 million men, women and children murdered by the Germans from
1933-1945 it is also important to remember that there are 400,000 Holocaust
Survivors still living around the world: 189,500 Survivors live in Israel and
100,000 Survivors live in the United States.
92% of all
Holocaust Survivors worldwide live below the poverty line and every day more
and more are dying.
17,000 Holocaust Survivors died worldwide
in 2020 (900 Israeli Holocaust Survivors died of Covid-19 in 2020.)
So when people
ask why they should care about something that happened 75 years ago you can
say:
- Because the
elderly man or woman you see sitting alone outside could be a Holocaust
Survivor (someone's Grandparent and Great-Grandparent) and that despite all the
horrors they experienced when they were younger (torture, starvation, watching
their friends and family all killed) they have tried to create a new life even
when they continue to struggle for basic things like food and medicine.
- It's also
equally important to continue to find and bring to justice those that committed
these crimes. It doesn't matter if they are in their 80s, 90s or 100s. For
decades they were allowed to live out in the open (in Germany, in Austria, in
the rest of Europe, in South America, etc.) and still receive government
pensions today for their "work" - killing innocent men, women and
children.
These murderers
(who crushed newborn babies against buildings with their bare hands, who
tortured the disabled, who beat the elderly in their final moments before being
gassed) should not be allowed to spend the remainder of their days in peace and
happiness.
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