AndreaGail
27th January 2012, 06:59 AM
January 27, 2012
A number of events are being held around the world to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the day when Soviet troops liberated the German Nazi-run Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in Poland in 1945.
The theme of the remembrance day this year is “Children and the Holocaust.”
It is estimated that 1.5 million European Jewish children died in the Holocaust, alongside some 4.5 million Jewish men and women.
The United Nations General Assembly designated January 27 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day in 2005.
In its resolution, the General Assembly rejected any denial of the Holocaust as an historical event.
It also urged states to develop educational programs that will instruct future generations about the horrors of genocide, and called for actively preserving sites that were involved in the Holocaust.
Turkey has marked the day by airing a French documentary about the Holocaust -- the first broadcast of its kind by state-run media in any Muslim-majority country.
On January 26, state-run Turkish Radio and Television broadcast the first part of filmmaker Claude Lanzmann's "Shoah," a nine-hour documentary on the killing of European Jews in Nazi death camps during World War II.
Consisting largely of Holocaust-survivor interviews, the documentary was aired as part of a campaign to promote understanding between Jews and Muslims and to fight Holocaust denial.
Pleas For Tolerance
The United Nations' High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, said in a statement marking the remembrance day that the Holocaust serves as a reminder for the world to learn from the past.
Pillay added that the remembrance day was held every year to ensure that "young people are aware of the important historical events, terrible as they may be, so that they can learn early on of the importance of their words and attitudes towards those who are different from them."
The chairman of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Irish Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore, who is currently on a visit to the Middle East, reiterated the need to continue to fight hate and intolerance.
He said in a statement that "The unique horrors of the Holocaust can never be forgotten. We can only truly honor the memory of the victims of the Holocaust by continuing to fight against... discrimination... as well as other forms of hate and intolerance present in our societies today."
http://www.rferl.org/content/world_marks_holocaust_remembrance_day/24464841.html
A number of events are being held around the world to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the day when Soviet troops liberated the German Nazi-run Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in Poland in 1945.
The theme of the remembrance day this year is “Children and the Holocaust.”
It is estimated that 1.5 million European Jewish children died in the Holocaust, alongside some 4.5 million Jewish men and women.
The United Nations General Assembly designated January 27 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day in 2005.
In its resolution, the General Assembly rejected any denial of the Holocaust as an historical event.
It also urged states to develop educational programs that will instruct future generations about the horrors of genocide, and called for actively preserving sites that were involved in the Holocaust.
Turkey has marked the day by airing a French documentary about the Holocaust -- the first broadcast of its kind by state-run media in any Muslim-majority country.
On January 26, state-run Turkish Radio and Television broadcast the first part of filmmaker Claude Lanzmann's "Shoah," a nine-hour documentary on the killing of European Jews in Nazi death camps during World War II.
Consisting largely of Holocaust-survivor interviews, the documentary was aired as part of a campaign to promote understanding between Jews and Muslims and to fight Holocaust denial.
Pleas For Tolerance
The United Nations' High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, said in a statement marking the remembrance day that the Holocaust serves as a reminder for the world to learn from the past.
Pillay added that the remembrance day was held every year to ensure that "young people are aware of the important historical events, terrible as they may be, so that they can learn early on of the importance of their words and attitudes towards those who are different from them."
The chairman of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Irish Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore, who is currently on a visit to the Middle East, reiterated the need to continue to fight hate and intolerance.
He said in a statement that "The unique horrors of the Holocaust can never be forgotten. We can only truly honor the memory of the victims of the Holocaust by continuing to fight against... discrimination... as well as other forms of hate and intolerance present in our societies today."
http://www.rferl.org/content/world_marks_holocaust_remembrance_day/24464841.html