UN Marks Holocaust Memorial Day With Exhibitions
UN Marks Holocaust Memorial Day With Exhibitions and Pledges of 'Never Again'
New York, Jan 27 2011 11:10AM
The United Nations today honoured the memory of the estimated six million Jews and countless others who perished in the Nazi death camps of the Second World War with ceremonies around the world and pledges to wipe genocide off the face of the Earth.
The General Assembly in 2005 designated 27 January, the date of the 1945 liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest and most notorious of all of the camps, as the International Day in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust, and this year's theme pays special tribute to the suffering of women.
"Mothers and daughters, grandmothers, sisters and
aunts, they saw their lives irrevocably changed, their
families separated and their traditions shattered,"
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a message. "Yet,
despite appalling acts of discrimination, deprivation and
cruelty, they consiste
ntly found ways to fight back
against their persecutors.
"They joined the resistance, rescued those in peril, smuggled food into ghettos and made wrenching sacrifices to keep their children alive. Their courage continues to inspire. On this Holocaust Remembrance Day, let us honour these women and their legacy.
"Let us pledge to create a world where such atrocities can never be repeated. We are all aware that such a future has yet to arrive," said the Secretary-General.
Paying homage to the
millions of Jews and thousands of other victims, including
Roma, Slavs, disabled people, homosexuals, Jehovah's
witnesses, communists and other political dissidents "whose
lives were brutally cut short by the ideology of hatred of
the Nazis and their allies," UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights Navi Pillay stressed that the Holocaust should serve
as a reminder of the dangers of marginalization of
particular groups and the need for urgent action at the
first signs that a climate conducive to gen
ocide is
emerging.
"It should remind us that hateful words have the ability to translate into hateful actions. The threat of genocide still remains," she said in a message.
"While we can never compensate for the Holocaust, or do justice to its millions of victims and their descendants, we can at least ensure that by remembering their suffering, and acting on what we have learned, we can mitigate the suffering of others today and in the future," she added, stressing the importance of brining perpetrators to justice.
Exhibitions on the Holocaust are being held at various UN offices, including New York, Vienna and Paris, with a travelling exhibit due to visit other centres, including in Africa, all stressing the categorical imperative of never allowing such a catastrophe to be perpetrated again.
The
educational-preventive significance of the Day is a major
focus of the UN Outreach Programme set up by th
e General
Assembly in 2005 with the UN Department of Public
Information (DPI) this year producing a Study Guide -- Women
and the Holocaust: Courage and Compassion -- to help high
school students better understand the experiences of Jewish,
Roma and Sinti women during the terror brought on them by
the Nazis and their collaborators.
"Faced with discrimination, impossible living conditions, and the prospect of death at every turn, these women were determined to meet their families' needs and protect their children to the best of their ability," UN Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information Kiyo Akasaka says in a foreword to the Guide.
"As their husbands, sons and
fathers were arrested and deported, traditional gender roles
changed, placing greater responsibilities upon women in the
family and community in the ghettos, and often making the
difference between life and death in the camps... Once
homemakers and caregivers, women had to work outside the
home and adapt
to stay alive in the worst of
circumstances, even when their children were killed before
their
eyes."
ENDS