Nazi death camp survivors mark anniversary of Auschwitz liberation on Holocaust Remembrance Day

A group of survivors of Nazi death camps marked the 79th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp during World War II in a modest ceremony Saturday in southern Poland.

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About 20 survivors from various camps set up by Nazi Germany around Europe laid wreaths and flowers and lit candles at the Death Wall in Auschwitz.

Later, the group will hold prayers at the monument in Birkenau. They were memorializing around 1.1 million camp victims, mostly Jews. The memorial site and museum are located near the city of Oswiecim. 

Nearly 6 million European Jews were killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust — the mass murder of Jews and other groups before and during World War II


Marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the survivors will be accompanied by Polish Senate Speaker Malgorzata Kidawa-Blonska, Culture Minister Bartlomiej Sienkiewicz and Israeli Ambassador Yacov Livne. 

The theme of the observances is the human being, symbolized in simple, hand-drawn portraits. They are meant to stress that the horror of Auschwitz-Birkenau lies in the suffering of people held and killed there.

Holocaust victims were commemorated across Europe.

In Germany, where people put down flowers and lit candles at memorials for the victims of the Nazi terror, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that his country would continue to carry the responsibility for this “crime against humanity.”

He called on all citizens to defend Germany’s democracy and fight antisemitism, as the country marked the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

“Never again’ is every day,” Scholz said in his weekly video podcast. “Jan. 27 calls out to us: Stay visible! Stay audible! Against antisemitism, against racism, against misanthropy — and for our democracy.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whose country is fighting to repel Russia’s full-scale invasion, posted an image of a Jewish menorah on X, formerly known as Twitter, to mark the remembrance day.

“Every new generation must learn the truth about the Holocaust. Human life must remain the highest value for all nations in the world,” said Zelenskyy, who is Jewish and has lost relatives in the Holocaust. 

“Eternal memory to all Holocaust victims!” Zelenskyy tweeted.


In Italy, Holocaust commemorations included a torchlit procession alongside official statements from top political leaders. 

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni said that her conservative nationalist government was committed to eradicating antisemitism that she said had been “reinvigorated” amid the Israel-Hamas war. Meloni’s critics have long accused her and her Brothers of Italy party, which has neo-fascist roots, of failing to sufficiently atone for its past.

Later Saturday, leftist movements planned a torchlit procession to remember all victims of the Holocaust — Jews but also Roma, gays and political dissidents who were deported or exterminated in Nazi camps.

Police were also on alert after pro-Palestinian activists indicated that they would ignore a police order and go ahead with a rally planned to coincide with the Holocaust commemorations. Italy’s Jewish community has complained that such protests have become occasions for the memory of the Holocaust to be co-opted by anti-Israel forces and used against Jews.

In Poland, a memorial ceremony with prayers was held Friday in Warsaw at the foot of the Monument to the Heroes of the Ghetto, who fell fighting the Nazis in 1943.

Earlier in the week, the countries of the former Yugoslavia signed an agreement in Paris to jointly renovate Block 17 in the red-brick Auschwitz camp and install a permanent exhibition there in memory of around 20,000 people who were deported from their territories and brought to the block. Participating in the project will be Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia and Slovenia

The gate with “Arbeit macht frei” (Work sets you free) written across it is pictured at the Auschwitz-Birkenau former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp during events marking the 79th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau camp in Oswiecim, Poland on January 27, 2024. © Bartosz Siedlik, AFP

Preserving the camp, a notorious symbol of the horrors of the Holocaust, with its cruelly misleading “Arbeit Macht Frei” (“Work Makes One Free”) gate, requires constant effort by historians and experts, and substantial funds.

The Nazis, who occupied Poland from 1939-1945, at first used old Austrian military barracks at Auschwitz as a concentration and death camp for Poland’s resistance fighters. In 1942, the wooden barracks, gas chambers and crematoria of Birkenau were added for the extermination of Europe’s Jews, Roma and other nationals, as well as Russian prisoners of war. 

Soviet Red Army troops liberated Auschwitz-Birkenau on Jan. 27, 1945, with about 7,000 prisoners there, children and those who were too weak to walk. The Germans had evacuated tens of thousands of other inmates on foot days earlier in what is now called the Death March, because many inmates died of exhaustion and cold in the sub-freezing temperatures. 

Since 1979, the Auschwitz-Birkenau site has been on the UNESCO list of World Heritage.

(AP) 



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Historian debunks claims that Coco Chanel served in the French Resistance

New documents surfaced in September indicating that Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel may have played a double role during World War II, serving not only as an informant for the Nazis but also as a member of the French Resistance. But a historian who has analysed the new evidence says he has “serious doubts” about her alleged membership in La Résistance, suggesting the French fashion icon may have used the documents to restore her reputation after the war.

The previously unseen documents were revealed to the public in mid-September at the opening of a London exhibition tracing the life and legacy of the French couturier. Alongside more than 50 of Chanel’s iconic tweed suits and a whole room dedicated to Chanel No. 5 perfume, a part of the “Gabrielle Chanel: Fashion Manifesto” retrospective also dealt with the designer’s wartime past.

Chanel’s links to the Nazis have long been established by declassified documents. She spent the war living at the Ritz after falling in love with German intelligence officer Baron Hans Gunther von Dincklage. In July 1941, at the height of World War II, the Nazis registered her as a “trusted source” and gave her the code name “Westminster” due to her close connections with the British government and especially Winston Churchill. In 1943, Chanel was, among other things, tasked with the secret mission of trying to persuade Churchill to negotiate with the Germans.   

But the exhibition included two new documents claiming she was also part of the French Resistance. The first is a certificate allegedly showing her membership in the Resistance between January 1, 1943 and April 17, 1944 in which Chanel is described as an “occasional agent”. The other shows her affiliation with the “Eric” underground resistance network and lists her code name as “Coco”.

A 1957 certificate purportedly attesting Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel’s membership in the French Resistance movement. © Guillaume Pollack / Private / Archive reference number: SHD/GR 16 P 118851

“We have verification from the French government, including a document from 1957, which confirms her active participation in the resistance,” exhibit curator Oriole Cullen told The Guardian at the time.

Gabrielle Chanel: Fashion Manifesto” opened at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London on September 16.

It was not stated how the curators had found the documents.

Thin file

The new findings intrigued French historian Guillaume Pollack, a specialist on the French Resistance, who last year published a book on the history and inner workings of the movement’s networks.

“It really surprised me, and I thought to myself: ‘Chanel in the Resistance? How in the world could I have missed something as big as that?” he recalled, saying he went on to spend two weeks chasing down the documents.

He finally found them in the French military archives in the eastern Paris suburb of Vincennes.

“When I opened up the file, something struck me right away: It was basically empty. Aside from two official documents, there was nothing there. I’ve rarely come across such a dry file,” he said.

Under normal circumstances, Pollack explained, such files are filled to the brim with information explaining the exact role and actions of the resistance member in question, and are backed up with several third-party testimonies. 

Pollack explained that the reason for this is that these files were compiled by the French government after the end of World War II and conform to special legislation that stipulates how and under what circumstances a person can be officially recognised as a onetime member of the French Resistance.

“If one thing is clear, it is that in order to be called a résistant (member of the Resistance), you need to have been active as such and recognised [by others] as such.”

“In this case, there is none of that – not a single trace,” he said, noting that a bare-bones certificate with Chanel’s name does not offer convincing proof.

An important year for Chanel

The second document, citing Chanel’s role in the Eric network, also puzzled Pollack: “It seemed really strange to me.” 

Eric was a French resistance network that, for the most part, operated in the Balkans. Pollack said that even though its leader, René Simonin, was repatriated to Paris in 1943 and the network continued to work from the French capital for another year, there is no mention of Chanel in any other documentation related to the network apart from the affiliation certificate found in the military archives and presented at the exhibition.

On top of that, the network name, “Eric”, was written over a part of the document that had clearly been whited out.  

A document purporting to show that Chanel belonged to the French Resistance network
A document purporting to show that Chanel belonged to the French Resistance network “Eric”. © Guillaume Pollack / Private / Archive reference number: SHD/GR 16 P 118851

Pollack said he also questioned the date that Chanel’s membership certificate was issued: 1957. Chanel was 74 years old at the time, and Pollack said that was unusually late compared to other Resistance members.

It was also “the year Chanel was honoured with the ‘Oscar’ of fashion”, he said, referring to the prestigious Neiman Marcus fashion award created in 1938. At the time, it was one of the only international fashion designer awards in existence. 

No reason to keep it secret

Pollack said that if Chanel really was a member of the French Resistance, she would have had no reason to keep it secret and it would likely have been known before now.

“Especially considering the context surrounding Coco Chanel [who has long been known as a collaborator], it just doesn’t make sense.”

She may have had documents produced to rehabilitate her tarnished reputation in certain circles after the war, Pollack suggested

“In the 1950s, several different Resistance veteran organisations emerged. It would have prompted a lot of questions from former Resistance fighters” if Chanel had claimed to have been part of the movement, Pollack said, noting she would most likely have had to justify her role by providing details on what she did, where, when and with whom.

Pollack said he has “doubts, huge doubts, about this documentation” that has newly been discovered. “The certificate proves nothing.”

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The Kremlin fuelled antisemitism at home. Then it blew up

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent in any way the editorial position of Euronews.

Vladimir Putin had been instigating antisemitism in Russia long before the lynch mob stormed the airport in Dagestan’s capital Makhachkala, Aleksandar Đokić writes.

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Islamophobia and antisemitism have been on the rise worldwide since the beginning of the Hamas-Israel conflict. 

Both stem from two general kinds of racism: the grassroots one, which tends to originate in parts of society at the base level, and the top-down one, which is spread from those in power and their exponents.

As such, top-down racism is unthinkable in our day and age, as it would go against the basic moral principles of contemporary democratic societies.

On the other end of the political spectrum, autocratic leaders more often than not intentionally instrumentalise historical divisions in their societies — including ethnic, religious, racial or class ones. 

Dictators strive to profit from tensions in society in order to prevent various societal groups from uniting against their rule. Autocrats tend to know when and exactly how to stir and agitate certain social groups when they believe it’s necessary. 

Yet, sometimes these actions spiral out of control and produce unwanted results. That was the case with the recent anti-Jewish riot — labelled by some as a pogrom — at the Dagestan international airport.

Debating Zelenskyy’s heritage to back talk of ‘Ukrainian Nazis’

Ever since the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has not shied away from stirring up anger and contempt against those of Jewish background or Jewish identity in general. 

The dominant discourse spread by Moscow’s power circles has been marked by a key talking point that can be summarised as “the Anglo-Saxons (meaning, the West) have installed a Jewish puppet — who’s not even Jewish in a fundamental sense — in Kyiv to cover up the contemporary Ukrainian Nazism.” 

This toxic notion has been thoroughly debunked, yet, this is almost exactly what Russia’s Vladimir Putin said on 5 September, just two months before the antisemitic lynch mob stormed the airport in Dagestan’s capital Makhachkala. 

“Western curators put at the head of contemporary Ukraine a person — an ethnic Jew, with Jewish roots, with Jewish origins. And thus, in my opinion, they seem to cover up a certain anti-human essence, which is the foundation, the basis of the modern Ukrainian state,” Putin said.

With the Kremlin’s supposed “denazification” of Ukraine as the ideological basis for the legitimisation of its invasion of a neighbouring country, Putin has in fact repeatedly questioned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s Jewish identity while also using it against him.

“I have had many Jewish friends since childhood. They all say, ‘Zelenskyy is not Jewish, he is a disgrace to the Jewish people’ … Zelenskyy is a man of Jewish blood. Yet with his actions, he covers up these neo-Nazi monsters,” Putin said earlier in June.

Licence to kill

On 22 October, a week before the Dagestan’s international airport rampage, a well-known state propagandist, Dmitry Kiselev, said on state TV that “antisemitism is a cultural norm for hundreds of millions of Muslims, passed on from one generation to another. And no amount of political correctness can do anything about it.”

This statement is indeed both Islamophobic and antisemitic. However, the same Russian state TV channels have, like the Kremlin, papered over their latent Islamophobia by taking a clear pro-Hamas position and placing tradition at the cornerstone of politics. This is why these kinds of messages were easily interpreted by some in the Northern Caucasus — a traditionally Muslim-majority region — as a way to legitimise hate and declare an open hunt on Jewish people. 

It is also clear why the instigators believed there would be no pushback from the authorities, and why they ended up being treated much more leniently than Russian anti-war protesters, for example. Why would a country, which supports Hamas and claims that antisemitism is “tradition”, persecute them if they embarked on an antisemitic campaign? And isn’t this undertaking essentially just a fervent display of support for the state?

Besides official ties of the Russian leadership with Hamas, the mainstream media discourse in Russia has been clearly anti-Israel ever since Hamas’ militants organised and conducted a massacre of Israeli civilians on 7 October. 

There wasn’t a single statement denouncing Hamas as an extremist or terrorist organisation in the Russian state media — only calls for an independent Palestinian state and accusations against Israel of cynically murdering Palestinian civilians.

Setting things on fire and blaming the US

All of this is quite the opposite of responsible Western leaders, intellectuals and media pundits who always make it clear that the Hamas militants committed a horrible act of violence while voicing their legitimate concern for the protection of the Palestinian civil population. 

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This is the only way to combat antisemitism and send a clear message to society: terrorism is not acceptable under any circumstance, and any violent act or hate speech incident against Jewish citizens in the democratic world will be severely persecuted in accordance with the law. 

This, of course, doesn’t mean that protests in support of Palestine and Palestinians are or should be stigmatised. In fact, it means that there simply has to be a clear dividing line between propagating Hamas’ terrorism and supporting Palestinians.

Such a clear line was never drawn in Russian media. Instead, the Russian state sent a direct, malignant signal inciting its already highly antisemitic and intolerant society: “Jews are Nazis in Ukraine, and they are now intentionally killing Palestinian children”. 

So if you were just a regular consumer of mainstream TV content in Russia, you would end up believing that taking the fight to nominally Jewish passengers of a flight from Tel Aviv that had landed in Makhachkala is a patriotic act in every possible sense.

In the end, Putin blamed the US for an easily anticipated explosion of antisemitism in Russia. “It is necessary to know and understand where the root of evil is, that spider who is attempting to wrap the entire planet, the entire world, into its web,” he said after the Dagestan riot.

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Yet, the responsibility for the hate lies squarely on Putin and Russia. Russian propaganda has been demonising Ukrainians for almost a decade. Now it’s the turn of Russia’s Jewish population to be stigmatised, just like it was many times through history. And if Putin keeps having it his way, in the end, there will be no one left to hate.

Aleksandar Đokić is a Serbian political scientist and analyst with bylines in Novaya Gazeta. Formerly, he was a lecturer at RUDN University in Moscow.

At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at [email protected] to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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The EU should join Britain’s push to illuminate its Holocaust past

By uniting memory and cooperation, we can build a better world — a world where diversity is celebrated, where prejudice is condemned, and where the lessons of history guide us towards a future of compassion, understanding, and peace, Scott Saunders writes.

The recent announcement of a UK government inquiry into the Nazi concentration camps on Alderney is a profound and commendable step towards preserving the memory of one of history’s darkest chapters. 

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The Channel Islands, nestled within the UK and under Nazi occupation during World War II, became the site of unimaginable cruelty that mirrored the horrors experienced across Europe. 

Between 1942 and 1944, the Nazis operated four camps on Alderney. At least 700 people perished on the spot, with the remainder of the inmates transferred to France as the war neared its end. Some 400 graves of victims remain on the island to this day.

The victims of the Holocaust on British soil have waited too long for their stories to be told, and this inquiry is a crucial opportunity to bring their experiences to light.

A sacred journey to confront the past

Memory, as the cornerstone of our humanity, shapes our actions and guides our future. 

It is our solemn duty to ensure that the horrors of the Holocaust are etched into the collective consciousness of humanity. 

By working to uncover the truth of lesser-known Holocaust atrocities, we honour the victims’ memories and embrace the survivors’ resilience, ensuring that their experiences reach every corner of the world.

The Alderney inquiry transcends mere historical examination; it represents a sacred journey to confront our past honestly and responsibly. 

It calls for an alliance of nations, standing together as guardians of memory and advocates for a more compassionate and understanding world.

The Holocaust was a universal tragedy, transcending borders and impacting the lives of countless individuals and communities. 

It is a history that calls for collective remembrance, transcending national boundaries to foster unity in our commitment to safeguarding human rights and preventing future atrocities.

Learning from the survivors

As the Chairman of March of the Living, an organisation dedicated to Holocaust remembrance and education, I have the privilege of meeting countless survivors whose indomitable spirit continue to inspire me. 

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Their courage in sharing their traumatic experiences highlights the significance of preserving and disseminating their stories to ensure that history’s lessons are learned, not forgotten.

The survivors of the Holocaust provide a living testament to the resilience of the human spirit. They serve as beacons of hope, reminding us that even in the darkest times, hope and courage can prevail. 

Their experiences are not merely chapters in history books; they are profound lessons in humanity and the consequences of unchecked hatred.

Preserving their stories and sharing them with the world is not only a tribute to their endurance but also a crucial step in educating future generations about the consequences of intolerance. 

Their voices must not be lost in the sands of time but must echo through the ages, inspiring generations to come to stand against bigotry and prejudice.

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The importance of collaboration

The UK government’s decision to undertake the Alderney inquiry is a commendable step, but it is essential to recognise the importance of international cooperation. 

As the European Union represents a union of diverse nations bound by a shared commitment to historical remembrance and human rights, its participation in the inquiry would reinforce the notion that the memory of the Holocaust unites us all.

By supporting the inquiry, the EU can contribute invaluable resources, expertise, and solidarity, elevating the investigation to greater heights of thoroughness and comprehensiveness. 

Collaborating on this vital endeavour will send a powerful message of unity and empathy, demonstrating that Europe stands shoulder to shoulder in the face of the darkest episodes in its history.

Moreover, the EU’s involvement would extend the impact of Holocaust education across its member states, fostering a sense of collective responsibility to remember and learn from the past. 

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The stories of the survivors, like echoes from history, resonate throughout the continent, reminding us of the price of hatred and intolerance.

Building a future rooted in compassion

The inquiry is not merely about unearthing historical facts but also about honouring the memories of those who perished and those who survived. 

By understanding the true extent of the horrors that occurred even in places we might not expect, we can confront the darkest elements of our history and work towards a future free from bigotry and violence.

Through collaboration and education, we can break the cycle of hatred and intolerance that has perpetuated human suffering throughout history. 

By uniting memory and cooperation, we can build a better world — a world where diversity is celebrated, where prejudice is condemned, and where the lessons of history guide us towards a future of compassion, understanding, and peace.

The Alderney inquiry is a testament to the power of memory and the strength of collaboration. 

Together, let us embrace this opportunity to illuminate history’s darkest corners, remembering the victims, honouring the survivors, and working collectively to build a world rooted in tolerance, compassion, and peace. 

May our unity in this endeavour serve as an eternal beacon of hope, guiding humanity away from the shadows of the past and towards a future defined by understanding, empathy, and a shared commitment to never forget.

Scott Saunders is the Founder and Chair of March of the Living UK.

At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at [email protected] to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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Holocaust survivors, descendants mark 80th anniversary of Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Descendants of the 400,000 Jews imprisoned in the Warsaw Ghetto marked the 80th anniversary of their doomed uprising against their Nazi occupiers on Wednesday with concerts, exhibitions and speeches given by Polish, German and Israeli leaders. Family members of the survivors gathered to share their ancestors’ stories and asked questions about Poland’s fight against anti-Semitism today.

There are few visible traces of the 1,000-year-old Jewish presence in the Polish capital of Warsaw today. Only several walls and a synagogue built in 1902, which was used as stables by German occupying troops in WWII, remain.

But the story of those imprisoned in the Warsaw Ghetto, and their doomed, heroic uprising against their Nazi occupiers, is vividly told at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.

The imposing museum, which was opened in 2013, tells the history of the Jewish community in Poland, the largest in the world until WWII. Exhibits include a replica of a wooden synagogue from the 17th century that was destroyed in 1941. There are chilling descriptions of how the Nazis murdered European Jews, killing90% of Poland’s three million Jews.

“Memory unites us”, reads a POLIN Museum poster in the streets of Warsaw on April 18, 2023. © David Gormezano, FRANCE 24

Although Poland has seen several episodes of anti-Semitism since the end of World War II, the museum’s creation has been almost unanimously welcomed.

It is undoubtedly a step forward in the fight against the prejudice and violence that Jews in Poland have suffered throughout history and that sporadically resurface in the country.

The POLIN museum, a shrine in memory of the Ghetto

This museum is incredible,” said Anette Weynszteyn, who had come from Sao Paulo, Brazil to attend the opening ceremony of a temporary exhibition which features a photo of her mother.

“My mother never spoke about what happened during the war until she was interviewed by the Shoah Foundation [Editor’s note: a project launched by Steven Spielberg in 1994 to gather filmed testimonies of Holocaust survivors.] That’s how I learned that everyone in my mother’s family, Jewish Poles, had died during the war,” she explained.

The exhibition, “Around Us a Sea of Fire”, marks the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and aims to portray the hell of the ghetto by drawing on civilians’ experiences through personaldocuments such as writings and photos.

A plaque below the photo of Weynszteyn’s mothertells her story. Stefania Milenbach was just 22 years old in 1943. Her parents, her sister and her husband had been deported to the Treblinkadeath camp where they subsequently died. But Milenbach, along with a small group of people, managed to hide in the rubble of the Ghetto, which had been methodically destroyed by the Nazis between April 19 and May 16, 1943.

She gave birth to a child who died of hunger several days later and managed to survive the last two years of war before emigrating to Israel then Brazil in 1950.

“I came for the first time in 2012, to learn more about this story because it is my story,” Weynszteyn said.

Anette Weynszteyn (centre), stands beneath a photo of her mother. Suzana Schnepf-Kolacz, the exhibition curator, and Polish historian Barbara Engelking, are to her right and left at the POLIN museum on April 18, 2023.
Anette Weynszteyn (centre), stands beneath a photo of her mother. Suzana Schnepf-Kolacz, the exhibition curator, and Polish historian Barbara Engelking, are to her right and left at the POLIN museum on April 18, 2023. © David Gormezano, FRANCE 24

 

“The museum didn’t exist yet and I think it’s wonderful to put these testimonies on display. They deserve to be known by everyone so that a catastrophe like this will never be repeated,she said, adding that she was worried by anti-Semitism in the country today.

“Yes, anti-Semitism still exists in Poland today, as well as everywhere else, such as in France and other countries”.

Children and grandchildren from around the world

Not far from where Weynszteyn was standing, a group of 10 visitorsgazed at the photo of Leon Najberg, another Ghetto survivor.

Najberg was orphaned at 17 in 1943 after all of his family were killed. He managed to escape to the “Aryan side” of Warsaw, went into hiding and then, using false papers, joined the uprising in 1944 led by the Polish resistance against the German Army.

His daughter, Michaela, had come with her husband, her brother and their children to see the POLIN Museum’s tribute to her father.

“He came to Israel in 1949, where I was born. He also fought in Israel’s wars and witnessed the birth of his eight grandchildren before passing away in 2009 at 83 years old. That was his great victory over the Nazis.”

The children and grandchildren of Leon Najberg, a survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto at the POLIN museum on April 18, 2023.
The children and grandchildren of Leon Najberg, a survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto at the POLIN museum on April 18, 2023. © David Gormezano, France 24

 

As they walked around the exhibition, Michaela and her family praised the good work the museum had done in telling such harrowing storiesand seemed free of any resentment towards contemporary Poland.

Many historians have pointed out the passivity displayed by Warsaw residents during the massacre of their Jewish compatriots. Some studies have even revealed that the Jedwabne pogrom, which took place in the middle of the war, and the Kielce pogrom, which took place in 1946, were carried out by Poles.

But descendants of the survivors were quick to commend the Poles who had saved their relatives. 

“A non-Jewish Polish resistance fighter hid my father-in-law in his attic for nine months,” said Michaela’s husband Reuven. “He took immense risks, for him and his family. He was afraid of being denounced by his neighbours. After the war, my father-in-law asked for the man to be recognised as a Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem,” he said.

“It’s very moving to see this exhibition,” said Reuven and Michaela’s nephew, Edan Najberg, 35.

“We’ve grown up with our grandfather’s stories. This exhibition is amazing and we have no resentment about what happened. Polish fascists supported the Nazis but it was Poles who protected my grandfather after the Ghetto’s destruction in 1943 and until the Liberation. And now Poland is a democracy. I live in London where I have many Polish friends in London. You can’t judge someone on their great-grandparents’ behaviour. My friends are good people, we share the same values.”

For Edan, a young Israeli, getting to know the history of the Warsaw Ghetto is above all a way to explore his own family history.

“My grandfather fought, took up arms, killed German soldiers, SS members … so of course this history has influenced some of my life choices such as joining the Israel Defence Force for several years”.

Govt ‘playing a game’ with WWII history

For the children and grandchildren of Warsaw Ghetto survivors, the POLINMuseum helps to explore family histories and promote awareness among young Poles. Those interviewed by FRANCE 24 seemed unaware of the controversies surrounding the memory of the Holocaust and the martyrdom of Polish Jews, particularly since the PiS, the nationalist, conservative, anti-European right-wing party, took office in 2015.

In January 2018, Poland’s Sejm (the lower house of parliament) passed a bill which punishes “whoever accuses, publicly and against the facts, the Polish nation, or the Polish state, of being responsible or complicit in the Nazi crimes committed by the Third German Reich” by a fine or a penalty of imprisonment of up to three years”.

The newly introduced legislation is nothing less than an attempt to rewrite history, says Krzysztof Izdebski, a lawyer and former leader of the Jewish community in Poland.

“The government is playing a political game. They’re manipulating the statistics of the people who helped the Jews during the war. They exaggerate the figures because they only want to hear about this version of history. It’s a narrative that appeals to many people, the story of the Poles who helped the Jews, but it does not reflect the historical reality at all.”

Krzysztof Izdebski, a lawyer and former leader of the Jewish community in Poland on April 18, 2023.
Krzysztof Izdebski, a lawyer and former leader of the Jewish community in Poland on April 18, 2023. © David Gormezano, FRANCE 24

 

The 42-year-old lawyer is all too familiar with the complexities of Polish anti-Semitism. “In my family, my grandfather’s brother was denounced by one of his childhood friends and killed by the Germans. However, his son was sheltered by another Polish family during the war and survived. So it’s complicated,” he explained.

“By wanting to forbid people from speaking out against the Poles that collaborated with the Germans, the government is politicising history. This isn’t just about limiting public debate and threatening academics and all those who research the Holocaust. Jewish organisations continue to protest against this law.”

‘It’s part of our identity’

Véronique Felebok, a French theatre producer and daughter of a ghetto survivor, also criticised the current Polish government’s policies. “We are left-leaning people and I think this government is anti-Semitic and fascist. It is not possible to deny Poland’s responsibility for the Holocaust, it’s outrageous. And the government’s positions on homosexuality or abortion are also a turn-off.”

This is the third time that Véronique, accompanied by her mother, her children and her cousins, has travelled to Warsaw for the commemoration. “The first time was in 1993. I was with my father who was returning to the city he had left 50 years earlier and in which he had climbed through the sewers. He was 7 years old in 1943; his parents had been killed by the Nazis. He wanted to visit the house where he had been hidden when he left the Ghetto,” she said.

In 1993 there was still a lot of anti-Semitic feeling in Poland. In the old town of Krakow, several Poles shouted at us in German: “Raus Juden” (Get out Jews). My father fled to France to escape the anti-Semitism. After the war, soldiers from the Polish Resistance shot at the Lodz orphanage where he had been placed. So – under threat again – he was put on a train to France.”

She wrote a play about her father’s story and her first trip to Poland. In 2014, “Those who remained” was staged for the first time and was based on the memories of two children who survived the Warsaw Ghetto: Paul Felenbok (Veronique’s father) and his cousin Wlodka Blit-Robertson.

“Ten years ago when we came back, the atmosphere was much less hostile. We felt that the Poles were on our side. They handed out daffodils [a symbolic representation of the yellow star], they formed a human chain around the Ghetto. We met a lot of non-Jewish Polish students who were very empathetic, it was incredible and very moving.”

 

Véronique Felenbok and her mother Betty were in Warsaw for the commemoration on April 18, 2023.
Véronique Felenbok and her mother Betty were in Warsaw for the commemoration on April 18, 2023. © David Gormezano, FRANCE 24

 

This year, 17 members of her family made the trip to Warsaw in what is gradually becoming a sort of pilgrimage. “There are the children, the grandchildren, the great-grandchildren … I’m coming back to pay tribute to my father (who died in 2020) and to his whole family. And then, there is this incredible museum, it is crazy, it is the most beautiful tribute,” she said.

“We want to honour their memories,” added Véronique’s 17-year-old son Alix. “The Warsaw Ghetto is an important part of our family history. I’ve come here to remember it and pay tribute to those who fought. I’ve known about the uprising since I was born. My grandfather told me all about it; it was his childhood. This story shaped his life.”

In the living room of the Warsaw hotel where the Felebok family is staying, Véronique hadtrouble containing her emotions. “My mother saw her 18-year-old cousin deported before her very eyes. My father told me when I was 10 years old how he was hidden behind a false wall that the German soldiers were about to break down before being miraculously called away. It’s all part of our DNA. We are shaped by it,” she said.

Keeping the memories alive

There are now few remaining survivors and direct witnesses of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. But for their descendants, the commemoration marks the passing on of family legacies that are both heroic and tragic.

“What worries me is that my generation is the last generation to have known people who lived through that era; in my case it was my grandparents, who were children at the time,” said Izdebski. “So now the question is who’s going to keep those memories alive in the generations to come? Our community in Poland is tiny and not getting any bigger. So one day, this part of history will be preserved by Poles that have a different memory of it.” 

Today, despite difficulty in collecting accurate statistics, an estimated 10,000 Jews continue to live in Poland. 

This article was translated from the original in French.

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100 Year Old Lady At Florida School Board Better Patriot Than All Book Banners Put Together

Earlier this month, the school district in Martin County, Florida, purged at least 84 books from school libraries after complaints from the head of the local Moms for “Liberty” chapter under the state’s school censorship law, HB 1467, passed last year. PEN America notes that most of the books were removed following challenges by a single objector, “who filed forms indicating that she did not actually read any of the books in question.” No problem; in keeping with the law, a DeSanctified “media specialist” in the district reviewed the books, or at least the list, and the books were gone.

Among the familiar suspects like Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and Beloved,the banned books also included 20 by a single author, Jodi Picoult, who writes novels for the young adult market. Picoult notes in an op-ed that the complaints — again, all from the one Moms for Censorship lady — inaccurately described all her books as “adult romance that should not be on school shelves.” Picoult, who we suspect knows her books better than the mom who didn’t read them, points out that most of the books that were targeted “do not even have a kiss in them.,” but they do deal with social issues that make rightwingers sad, and they “encourage kids to think for themselves.” Can’t have that.

Picoult also notes that one of her books marked for culling was The Storyteller, a novel about the repercussions of the Holocaust.

It chronicles the growth of anti-Semitism and fascism in Nazi Germany. There was a strange irony that a parent wanted this particular book removed, because it felt a bit like history repeating itself.


Julie Marshall, the Mom for Purity who lodged the complaints, told the Washington Post by email, “At this point, we believe we have challenged the most obscene and age inappropriate books,” but didn’t specify what her issues with The Storyteller were. Apparently there’s sex, including depictions of Nazi guards committing sexual assault, so maybe we wouldn’t want kids thinking Nazis were rapists.

The removal of all those books meant that Tuesday night’s Martin County school board meeting was packed, with about 200 people there. Many of the 40 who spoke at the meeting called for the books to be restored, although a few also worried about all the nasty sex in books available to high school readers, giving the very laziest local news stations an excuse to present one quote from each side and call it good coverage.

Marshall was there, in a Wonder Woman T-shirt, to explain that while she filed almost all the complaints, she works with many many concerned parents both locally and nationwide, and sadly she didn’t actually say “There are dozens of us! Dozens!” But she did say

“If you guys want to continue making me out to be the sole parent in all of this and give me the power that I can have all these books removed and make me out to be Wonder Woman, so be it … Persecute me for standing on morality, I really don’t care.”

We really do hope someone lets her know that Wonder Woman is a queer icon, that Lynda Carter thinks bigots suck, and that the character was created in the first place by William Moulton Marston, who lived very happily in a throuple and deliberately included a LOT of bondage references in the comic, what with that Lasso o’ Truth and all. (He was also a lie-detector crank who always looked for a way to cash in on his dubious inventions, so there’s that.) Marston included this illustration, by Harry G. Peter, of what a real Wonder Woman believes, in his article “Why 100,000 Americans Read Comics” in American Scholar (1943-44):

Image: Harvard College Library via NPR

Happily, among the many folks calling for freedom to read, there was a real wonder woman at the school board meeting, 100-year-old Grace Linn, who knows far too well why fascism has to be nipped in the bud whenever it arises. Her husband was killed in action fighting them in WW II, and by god she’s not going to allow any book burners in her America, thank you very much.

Linn brought along a quilt she had made to honor books and ideas that the current round of fascists are trying to snuff out; in January, as America’s censorship crusade was well under way, she had shared a photo of her quilt with MSNBC’s Ali Velshi for his show’s “Banned Book Club” feature.

The quilt includes censored titles like Beloved,Maus, Fahrenheit 451, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Gender Queer, Two Boys Kissing, and more. Linn told Palm Beach TV station WPTV — one of the non-lazy ones! — “When I showed this to adult women, they’ll say, ‘Oh, no they didn’t do that to The Color Purple.‘”

Now, let’s get out of her way and listen:

A few highlights (full transcript of Linn’s remarks at AlterNet):

Good afternoon folks. I am Grace Lynn. I am a hundred years young. I’m here to protest our school district’s book-banning policy. My husband Robert Nichol was killed in action in World War II, at a very young age, he was only 26, defending our democracy, Constitution, and freedoms.

One of the freedoms that the Nazis crushed was the freedom to read the books they banned. They stopped the free press, banned and burned books. The freedom to read, which is protected by the First Amendment, is our essential right and duty of our democracy. Even so, it is continually under attack by both the public and private groups who think they hold the truth.

Linn noted she’d made the quilt last year in reply to the Right’s mania for book banning, and urged her fellow citizens not to knuckle under to today’s fascists, who seek power by trying to make us afraid of other Americans:

Banned books, and burning books, are the same. Both are done for the same reason: fear of knowledge. Fear is not freedom. Fear is not liberty. Fear is control. My husband died as a father of freedom. I am a mother of liberty. Banned books need to be proudly displayed and protected from school boards like this. Thank you very much. Thank you.

And that’s what we all need to be saying at every school and library board meeting in America, the end.

UPDATE: Well silly me, I didn’t include anything about the school board’s reactions to the two hours of public comment. According to the local paper, the board didn’t take any action on the banned books at Tuesday’s meeting, and no board members responded to the comments.

[PEN America / Daily Beast / WaPo / JTA / NPR / AlterNet / TC Palm]

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Holocaust Memorial Day commemorated amid horrors of Russia-Ukraine war

Auschwitz-Birkenau survivors and other mourners commemorated the 78th anniversary Friday of the Nazi German death camp’s liberation, some expressing horror that war has again shattered peace in Europe and the lesson of Never Again is being forgotten.

The former concentration and extermination camp is located in the town of Oświęcim in southern Poland, which was under the occupation of German forces during World War II and became a place of systematic murder of Jews, Poles, Soviet prisoners of war, Roma and others targeted for elimination by Adolf Hitler and his henchmen.

In all, some 1.1 million people were killed at the vast complex before it was liberated by Soviet troops on Jan. 27, 1945.

Today the site, with its barracks and barbed wire and the ruins of gas chambers, stands as one of the world’s most recognized symbols of evil and a site of pilgrimage for millions from around the world.

Jewish and Christian prayers for the dead were recited at the memorial site, which lies only 300 kilometers (185 miles) from Ukraine, where Russian aggression is creating unthinkable death and destruction — a conflict on the minds of many this year.


 

“Standing here today at this place of remembrance, Birkenau, I follow with horror the news from the east that the Russian army, which liberated us here, is waging a war there in Ukraine. Why? Why?” lamented survivor Zdzisława Włodarczyk during observances Friday.

Piotr Cywinski, Auschwitz state museum director, compared Nazi crimes to those the Russians have committed in Ukrainian towns like Bucha and Mariupol. He said they were inspired by a “similar sick megalomania” and that free people must not remain indifferent.

>> The smile at Auschwitz: Uncovering the story of a young girl in the French Resistance

“Being silent means giving voice to the perpetrators,” Cywinski said. “Remaining indifferent is tantamount to condoning murder.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin attended observances marking the 60th anniversary of the camp’s liberation in 2005. This year, no Russian official at all was invited due to Russia’s attack on Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy marked the event in a social media post, alluding to his own country’s situation.

“We know and remember that indifference kills along with hatred,” he said.


 

“Indifference and hatred are always capable of creating evil together only. That is why it is so important that everyone who values ​​life should show determination when it comes to saving those whom hatred seeks to destroy.”

>> Hitler’s ‘war of annihilation’: Operation Barbarossa, 80 years on

An Israeli teacher, Yossi Michal, paying tribute to the victims with a teachers union delegation, said it was important to remember the past, and while he said what is happening in Ukraine is terrible, he felt each case is unique and they shouldn’t be compared.

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, whose Brothers of Italy party has its roots in the post-Word War II neo-fascist Italian Social Movement, called the Holocaust “the abyss of humanity. An evil that touched also our country with the infamy of the racial laws of 1938.”

Bogdan Bartnikowski, a Pole who was 12 years old when he was transported to Auschwitz, said the first images he saw on television last February of refugees fleeing Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine triggered traumatic memories.

He was stunned seeing a little girl in a large crowd of refugees holding her mother with one hand and grasping a teddy bear in the other.

People watch a virtual reality film that allows viewers to tour Auschwitz.
People watch a virtual reality film that allows viewers to tour Auschwitz. © Reuters

 

“It was literally a blow to the head for me because I suddenly saw, after almost 80 years, what I had seen in a freight car when I was being transported to Auschwitz. A little girl was sitting next to me, hugging a doll  to her chest,” Bartnikowski, now 91, said.

Bartnikowski was among several survivors of Auschwitz who spoke about their experiences to journalists Thursday.

Another, Stefania Wernik, who was born at Auschwitz in November 1944, less than three months before its liberation, spoke of Auschwitz being a “hell on earth.”

She said when she was born she was so tiny that the Nazis tattooed her number — 89136 — on her thigh. She was washed in cold water, wrapped in rags and subjected to medical experiments.

And yet her mother had abundant milk, and they both survived. After the war, her mother returned home and reunited with her husband, and “the whole village came to look at us and said it’s a miracle.”

She appealed for “no more fascism, which brings death, genocide, crimes, slaughter and loss of human dignity.”

 

Among those who attended Friday’s commemorations was Doug Emhoff, the husband of U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris. Emhoff, the first Jewish person to be married to one of the top two nationally elected U.S. officials, bowed his head at an execution wall at Auschwitz, where he left a wreath of flowers in the U.S. flag’s colors and the words: “From the people of the United States of America.”

The Germans established Auschwitz in 1940 for Polish prisoners; later they expanded the complex, building death chambers and crematoria where Jews from across Europe were brought by train to be murdered.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said “the suffering of 6 million innocently murdered Jews remains unforgotten — as does the suffering of the survivors.”

“We recall our historic responsibility on Holocaust Memorial Day so that our Never Again endures in future,” he wrote on Twitter.

The German parliament was holding a memorial event focused this year on those who were persecuted for their sexual orientation. Thousands of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual people were incarcerated and killed by the Nazis. Their fate was only publicly recognized decades after the end of World War II.

Elsewhere in the world on Friday events were planned to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, an annual commemoration established by a United Nations resolution in 2005.

In Britain, candles were lit to remember victims of genocide in homes and public buildings, including Buckingham Palace.

UK man who saved children from horrors of concentration camps


 

(AP)



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