From the DW:
“German Bundestag commemorates
Holocaust Memorial Day”
(Inge Auerbacher giving her
speech in the Bundestag)
Germany's parliament has been
remembering the victims of the Nazi regime who died in the Holocaust. Lawmakers
heard the story of survivor Inge Auerbacher, who was deported to a camp in
Czechoslovakia at the age of 7. German lawmakers gathered in the lower house of
parliament, the Bundestag, to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The day marks the anniversary of the
liberation of the Nazis' Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in Poland, 77 years ago.
It remembers all victims of the National Socialist regime, including the 6
million murdered Jews.
Memories of a dark time Speaking
as a guest of honor, 87-year-old Holocaust survivor Inge Auerbacher told of her
memories as a small child before she was deported to the Theresienstadt
concentration camp in Czechoslovakia at the age of 7 in 1942. "I
still have very clear memories of that dark time, a time of terror and
hate," Auerbacher said. "Sadly this cancer had returned and hatred of
the Jews has returned to many countries of the world, including Germany. This
disease needs to be eradicated as swiftly as possible." Auerbacher,
who has lived in the United States for the past 75 years, said she had been the
youngest of some 1,100 people on the train to Theresienstadt. "My parents
and I were among the very few who survived." GIving her speech,
Auerbacher wore a butterfly broach to remember some 1.5 million Jewish children
who were murdered. She described the horrific conditions at the camp, used as a
transit facility for those who were sent to the gas chambers. "There were
frequent epidemics caused by the lack of sanitation and the overcrowded
conditions we lived in. Typhus was one of the worst dangers we faced. Rats,
mice, fleas, lice, and bedbugs were our constant companions." "There
were also frequent deportations, mostly to Auschwitz."
'The power of a human story' The
president of the Israeli parliament, Mickey Levy, spoke about the need — within
the walls of the historic Bundestag building — to remember the fragility of
democracy. "We are reminded of our duty to protect it at all costs." "Keeping
alive remembrance of the Holocaust is a difficult task that must be shouldered
by each generation anew," said Levy, speaking of "often
incomprehensible" statistics. "The
6 million Jews murdered are 6 million individual stories. Stories of lives not
lived, stories of people who are no longer with us," said Levy, paying
tribute to the memories that Auerbacher had described. "You have described your memories of
the Holocaust, and in doing so you have created a unique voice. This voice —
which shows the power of a human story to really get into people's and to
communicate in such a poignant way." "Thank you for making the
incomprehensible comprehensible," he said.
German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier and Chancellor Olaf Scholz, as well as Bundesrat President Bodo Ramelow,
were among those present at the ceremony. Bundestag President Bärbel Bas
also gave a speech warning against historical revisionism and ethnonationalism.
"Our country bears a special responsibility the genocide of the
European Jews is a German crime, yet it is also a past which is relevant to
all," said Bas. "Not only Germans, and not only Jews." "Together
with many others worldwide, we are taking a stance on remembrance of the
Holocaust. A stance against xenophobia and against antisemitism." January
27 was declared a legal day of remembrance for the victims of National
Socialism in Germany in 1996. Every year, the number of remaining Holocaust
survivors in Germany — and the living connection with one of modern history's
greatest atrocities — continues to dwindle. More than 15,000 survivors died in
2021, according to the Holocaust Survivors' Rights Authority, a government
department.
Duty to keep the memory alive German
President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Wednesday evening called for the memory of
Nazi war crimes to be kept alive. "We
remember the millions of people who were deported to concentration camps,
tortured and murdered there," he said during a visit to the former
Sachsenhausen concentration camp near Berlin. "They were imprisoned here because
they were political opponents of the regime, because they were Jews, because
they were counted among the Sinti and Roma, because they were homosexuals or
because they were prisoners of war." The responsibility today,
Steinmeier said, was to firmly counter all forms of anti-Semitism, racism and
discrimination. More than 200,000 people were imprisoned in
Sachsenhausen concentration camp between 1936 and 1945. Tens of thousands died
through hunger, disease, forced labor, medical experiments, mistreatment or
systematic extermination.
^ It is always interesting to see
how Germany remembers (or sometimes does not) the Holocaust. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/german-bundestag-commemorates-holocaust-memorial-day/a-60570634
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