The Manila Times

GERMANS MARK HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY

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Tens of thousands of Germans turned out across the country on Saturday to mark Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, just days after a string of protests against right-wing extremists.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who earlier this month joined a march against the far right, on Saturday welcomed what he said were “millions of fellow citizens marching in the streets” of Germany.

“Never again,” Scholz vowed Saturday as police in the western city of Duesseldor­f said about 100,000 people joined the peaceful protest there.

Demonstrat­ions were planned in 300 towns and villages across the country this weekend, according to the alliance “Together against the extreme right.”

In the northern city of Kiel, police said 11,500 people had gathered before midday.

“Democracy is not for the timid,” read placards alongside others saying, “Red card for the AfD” party of the extreme right.

Physiother­apist Johannes Boecker, aged 29, told Agence France-Presse (AFP), “It was important to demonstrat­e in memory of the victims of national socialism and also against the rise of the extreme right.”

In Stuttgart, where a couple of thousand people gathered, 60-year-old Margrit Walter told AFP: “I want to create a Nazi-free zone for my granddaugh­ter.”

‘Never again is every day’

Scholz, who had turned out at a protest two weeks ago in Potsdam, close to the capital, said he was delighted to see people “stand up.”

“Never again requires everybody’s vigilance. Our democracy is not a gift from God; it is

made by men,” the chancellor said. “Never again is every day.”

Defense Minister Boris Pistorius joined the protesters in his northweste­rn hometown of Osnabrueck, where he was born.

“There are three times as many demonstrat­ions as last week, particular­ly in the east of Germany,” said in a statement the citizen’s alliance Campact, which is among the organizers of the protest movement.

It is in the east, formerly communist East Germany, where the AfD finds its biggest following.

Holocaust Day, commemorat­ing the murder of 6 million Jews during World War 2, falls on the anniversar­y of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp by Soviet troops on Jan. 27, 1945.

In Poland, the site of the former camp, Auschwitz survivor Halina Birenbaum, 95, lamented anti-Jewish protests around the world and the “barbaric and long Russian attack against Ukraine ... the barbaric terrorist attacks by Hamas and war on every side.

“For me it makes the Holocaust go on,” she said.

In Germany, this year’s 79th Holocaust anniversar­y came shortly after a report by investigat­ive outlet Correctiv that revealed that AfD members had discussed the mass expulsion of immigrants and “non-assimilate­d citizens” at a November meeting with extremists.

The news sent shockwaves across Germany at a time when the AfD is soaring in opinion polls, just months ahead of three major regional elections in eastern Germany where their support is strongest.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser compared the extremist meeting on foreigners with the 1942 Wannsee conference when the Nazis plotted to exterminat­e European Jews.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? ‘NEVER AGAIN’
A menorah is pictured as Hungarian Defense Minister Kristof Szalay-Bobrovnicz­ky delivers a speech during a commemorat­ive ceremony at the synagogue of The Holocaust Memorial Center in Budapest on Saturday, Jan. 26, 2024, ahead of Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. January 27 will mark the 79th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz, a date that has become Holocaust Memorial Day.
AFP PHOTO ‘NEVER AGAIN’ A menorah is pictured as Hungarian Defense Minister Kristof Szalay-Bobrovnicz­ky delivers a speech during a commemorat­ive ceremony at the synagogue of The Holocaust Memorial Center in Budapest on Saturday, Jan. 26, 2024, ahead of Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. January 27 will mark the 79th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz, a date that has become Holocaust Memorial Day.

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