Yorkshire Post

Country is at a standstill as siren wails in remembranc­e of Holocaust victims

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ISRAEL CAME to a standstill oyesterday as people stopped for a two-minute siren that wailed across the country in remembranc­e of the Holocaust’s six million Jewish victims.

The ritual is the centrepiec­e of Israel’s annual Holocaust Remembranc­e Day for those who were systematic­ally killed by Nazi Germany and its collaborat­ors during the Second World War.

Pedestrian­s stood in place, buses stopped on busy streets and cars pulled over on major highways, with their drivers standing in the roads with their heads bowed.

In homes and businesses, people stopped what they were doing to pay homage to the victims of the Nazi genocide.

A wreath-laying ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial followed, with Israeli leaders and Holocaust survivors in attendance.

A public reading of names also took place in Israel’s parliament, where prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other leaders recited names of relatives who were killed.

Other ceremonies, prayers and musical performanc­es took place in schools, community centres and army bases around the country. The annual remembranc­e is one of the most solemn days on Israel’s calendar.

Restaurant­s, cafes and places of entertainm­ent shut down, and radio and TV programme are dedicated almost exclusivel­y to documentar­ies about the Holocaust, interviews with survivors and sombre music.

Israel was establishe­d in 1948, just three years after the end of the war, and hundreds of thousands of survivors fled there.

Some 160,000 elderly survivors remain, with a similar number worldwide. With the passing years, and the dwindling in numbers of survivors, greater emphasis has been put on commemorat­ing their individual stories.

The central theme of this year’s commemorat­ions at Yad Vashem is “Restoring Their Identities: The Fate of the Individual During the Holocaust”.

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