![]() “As the first country in Asia to do so, their efforts are exemplary and hopefully inspire other countries in the region and beyond to follow.” Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon at the ceremony conveyed his gratitude to the Holocaust survivors and the victims’ relatives, who he said are “going great lengths to let the world know of the truths and suffering of the Holocaust,” and his respect for Germany and its people for “not turning a blind-eye to this tragic history making a conscious effort to remember it, apologize and work toward healing.” The poem “Each of us has a name,” by Israeli poet Zelda Schneurson Mishkowsky, more commonly known as Zelda, was read out loud by Alon Saroya, an Israeli middle school student in Seoul. “I commend South Korea as they endorsed the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of anti-Semitism last year,” said Ambassador Reiffenstuel. Vowing to “never again” allow another Holocaust, Reiffenstuel commended Korea’s efforts to remember and honor the victims. But by that time, 6 million Jewish people and many others had already perished. 27, Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi concentration and extermination camp, located in then-occupied Poland. ![]() 27 annually since the United Nations designated the day in 2005. Memory, dignity and justice were three words selected to represent the theme of this year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day, held on Jan. “Honoring the lives of victims can take on various shapes - one of them could be for everyone to look up the name and testimony of perhaps just one person, light up a candle for them and treat their personal story with dignity as we remember each of the victims today,” said Michael Reiffenstuel, ambassador of Germany to Korea. A reel of video messages recorded by dozens of ambassadors in Seoul, each lighting a candle in remembrance of Holocaust victims, started the ceremony. Joined by the mayor of Seoul, members of the diplomatic community, academia and representatives of Israeli, German and Korean youths, the ceremony was held in a hybrid online-offline format due to coronavirus concerns. “The destruction of one-third of the Jewish people by a modern scientific state, an enlightened society which was liberal, open, Christian, advanced in every way before the advent of Nazism, a place in which Jewish contribution to culture was vast, intimate and undeniable - this is a deep riddle which no thinking world citizen in 2022 can afford not to ponder,” said Akiva Tor, ambassador of Israel to Korea, at the ceremony at the Goethe Institut Korea in central Seoul held for International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Never again, vowed over a hundred participants at a ceremony hosted by the embassies of Israel and Germany and the Goethe Institut Korea as they paid tribute to the victims of the Holocaust on Jan. Images of acts of remembrance will be displayed at the site of the former Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in partnership with the Auschwitz Memorial and Museum on the 26th and 27th of January.Įducate the world by taking to social media: Facebook users who searching for keywords associated with the Holocaust are encouraged to learn more at WJC and UNESCO’s On TikTok, individual posts related to the subject contain a notification encouraging viewers to do the same.Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon, center, and Israeli Ambassador to Korea Akiva Tor, to his right, and German Ambassador to Korea Michael Reiffenstuel, to his left, and members of the Goethe-Institut Korea, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and representatives of the Israeli, German and Korean youths commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day at the institute in central Seoul on Jan. Additional content will be made available throughout the month of January. Illuminate the past and focus your community’s attention through a public display of remembrance.Ĭlick here to find materials to share with your community or on social media.Hold an event in your community with featuring the testimony of a Holocaust survivor.Post your photo of yourself holding a #WeRemember sign to social media.Use the hashtag #WeRemember on social media and share content dedicated to preserving the legacy of the Holocaust.What can you do to ensure that the past is never forgotten?īetween the 20th and 27th of January – in advance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day – you can engage in simple but meaningful acts to bring this critical message to your community:
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