Auschwitz survivors warn of rising antisemitism 80 years on from the camp's liberation

A solemn ceremony marking the 80th anniversary of the Nazi death camp's liberation was attended by global leaders including King Charles and Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong.

Penny Wong standing in front of a row of candles. A large group of people are seated behind her.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong (pictured) placed a lit candle at the Auschwitz-Birkenau former Nazi German concentration and extermination camp during a ceremony marking the 80th anniversary of its liberation. Source: AAP / Czarek Sokolowski

Key Points
  • Auschwitz survivors marked the 80th anniversary of the camp's liberation, warning against growing antisemitism.
  • The ceremony at Auschwitz was attended by global leaders, including King Charles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong.
  • Leaders stressed how important it was to preserve the memory of the Holocaust.
Auschwitz survivors have warned of the dangers of rising antisemitism as they marked the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi German death camp by Soviet troops in one of the last such gatherings of those who experienced its horrors.

The ceremony at the site of the camp, which Nazi Germany set up in occupied Poland during World War Two to murder European Jews on a huge scale, was attended by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, King Charles, French President Emmanuel Macron, Polish President Andrzej Duda, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong and many other leaders.

They did not make speeches but rather listened for perhaps the last time to those who suffered and witnessed at first hand one of humanity's greatest atrocities.
Israel, founded for Jews in the shadow of the Holocaust, sent its education minister Yoav Kisch.

"We see in the modern world today a great increase in antisemitism, and it was antisemitism that led to the Holocaust," said Marian Turski, 98, who was sent to Auschwitz in 1944 and survived the westward "death march" to Buchenwald in 1945.

"Let's not be afraid to convince ourselves that we can solve problems between neighbours."
Retired physician Leon Weintraub, 99, who was separated from his family and sent to Auschwitz in 1944, warned of the dangers of intolerance.

"I ask you to multiply your efforts to counteract the views whose effects we are commemorating today," he said.

Retired pharmacist Janina Iwanska, a Polish Catholic, said that "80 years after the liberation, the world is again in crisis".

"Our Jewish-Christian values have been overshadowed worldwide by prejudice, fear, suspicion and extremism," she said.

"And the rampant antisemitism that is spreading among the nations is shocking".
Antisemitic incidents have surged along with protests against Israel in many parts of Europe, North America and Australia since Israel launched its assault on the Palestinian enclave of the Gaza Strip after attacks on Israel by Hamas militants on 7 October 2023.

Ronald Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, said on Monday that hatred of Jews was rising against the backdrop of that war, adding: "Young people are getting most of their information from social media, and that is dangerous."

Before the ceremony, which took place in a tent built over the gate to the former Auschwitz II-Birkenau camp, leaders stressed how important it was to preserve the memory of the Holocaust.

"The act of remembering the evils of the past remains a vital task, and in so doing we inform our present and shape our future," King Charles said during a visit to the Jewish Community Centre in Krakow.
Wong posted to X on Monday saying she had spoken with Zofia Radzikowska, a Holocaust survivor, with Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus about the "resilience of the Jewish people" at the Jewish Community Centre.

Duda told reporters at the camp that "we Poles, on whose land the Germans built this concentration camp, are today the guardians of memory".

More than 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, perished in gas chambers or from starvation, cold and disease at Auschwitz, where most had been brought in freight wagons, packed like livestock.

More than three million of Poland's 3.2 million Jews were murdered by the Nazis.

In all, between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered six million Jews across German-occupied Europe, along with gypsies, sexual minorities, people with disability and others who offended Nazi ideas of racial superiority.

Share
4 min read
Published 28 January 2025 6:37am
Updated 28 January 2025 6:56am
Source: Reuters, SBS


Share this with family and friends