Baltimore Sun Sunday

World remembers Holocaust amid signs of rising hatred

- By Vanessa Gera and Matthew Lee

WARSAW, Poland — Elderly Holocaust survivors wearing striped scarves that recalled their uniforms as prisoners of Nazi Germany made a yearly pilgrimage to Auschwitz on Saturday, 73 years after the Soviet army liberated the death camp in occupied Poland.

On the date now commemorat­ed as Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, political leaders and Jewish officials warned that the Nazi genocide must never cease to be a reminder of the evil of which humans are capable.

In Warsaw, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson attended a solemn ceremony at a memorial to Jews who died fighting the German forces in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943.

Tillerson trailed two Polish military officers and readjusted a wreath underneath the monument, a hulking structure located in what was once the Warsaw Ghetto. The head of Warsaw’s Jewish community read a prayer, and Tillerson made brief remarks about the importance of not forgetting the horrors of the Holocaust. “On this occasion, it reminds us that we can never, we can never, be indifferen­t to the face of evil,” he said.

“The Western alliance which emerged from World War II has committed itself to ensuring the security of all that this would never happen again,” Tillerson said.

His words came amid signs in Europe and beyond that ultranatio­nalism and extreme right-wing groups are on the rise.

In Germany and Austria, nations that perpetrate­d the killing of 6 million Jews and millions of others during World War II, far-right parties with their roots in the Nazi era are gaining strength. The anti-migrant, anti-Muslim Alternativ­e for Germany party won seats in the German parliament for the first time last year, while the nationalis­t, anti-migrant Freedom Party is part of the coalition running the Austrian government. Both parties have members who have made anti-Semitic remarks.

Ultranatio­nalists who espouse anti-Jewish and anti-Muslim views seem emboldened elsewhere as well. “Neo-Nazis and white supremacy groups are among the main purveyors of extreme hatred,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement. “And too often, vile views are moving from the margins to the mainstream of societies and politics. We must stand together against the normalizat­ion of hate.”

In Europe, the outspoken white nationalis­m is seen as partially a backlash to a large influx of mostly Muslim migrants that peaked in 2015. Some of those migrants have brought their own brand of anti-Semitism with them. In Germany, many Jews have reported feeling threatened by anti-Semitism — both from native far-right groups and from newcomers from Arab countries. Jewish institutio­ns across the country have increased security.

Meanwhile, Muslim immigrants have been targets of German far-right attacks or threats.

Hanni Levy, a 93-yearold Holocaust survivor from Berlin, criticized antimigran­t hatred in a speech Saturday at a Greens party convention in Hannover. “In the past, the Jews were found guilty of everything. Today it’s the refugees. One should never forget how difficult it is to leave behind everything just to survive.”

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP ?? Holocaust survivors attend a commemorat­ion event in Auschwitz, Poland, on Saturday.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP Holocaust survivors attend a commemorat­ion event in Auschwitz, Poland, on Saturday.

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