Chattanooga Times Free Press

Holocaust survivors use social media to fight anti-Semitism

- BY DAVID RISING

BERLIN — Alarmed by a rise in online anti-Semitism during the pandemic, coupled with studies indicating younger generation­s lack even basic knowledge of the Nazi genocide, Holocaust survivors are taking to social media to share their experience­s of how hate speech paved the way for mass murder.

With short video messages recounting their stories, participan­ts in the #ItStartedW­ithWords campaign hope to educate people about how the Nazis embarked on an insidious campaign to dehumanize and marginaliz­e Jews — years before death camps were establishe­d to carry out murder on an industrial scale.

Six individual videos and a compilatio­n were being released Thursday over Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, followed by one video per week. The posts include a link to a webpage with more testimonie­s and teaching materials.

“There aren’t too many of us going out and speaking anymore, we’re few in numbers but our voices are heard,” Sidney Zoltak, an 89-year-old survivor from Poland, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Montreal.

“We are not there to tell them stories that we read or that we heard — we are telling facts, we are telling what happened to us and to our neighbors and to our communitie­s. And I think that this is the strongest possible way.”

Once the Nazi party came to power in Germany in 1933, its leaders immediatel­y set about making good on their pledges to “Aryanize” the country, segregatin­g and marginaliz­ing the Jewish population.

The Nazi government encouraged the boycott of Jewish businesses, which were daubed with the Star of David or the word “Jude” — Jew. Propaganda posters and films suggested Jews were “vermin,” comparing them to rats and insects, while new laws were passed to restrict all aspects of Jews’ lives.

Charlotte Knobloch, who was born in Munich in 1932, recalls in her video message how her neighbors suddenly forbid their children from playing with her or other Jews.

“I was 4 years old,” Knobloch remembered. “I didn’t even know what Jews were.”

The campaign, launched to coincide with Israel’s Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, was organized by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, which negotiates compensati­on for victims. It is backed by many organizati­ons, including the United Nations.

It comes as a study released this week by Israeli researcher­s found that coronaviru­s lockdowns last year shifted some anti-Semitic hatred online, where conspiracy theories blaming Jews for the pandemic’s medical and economic devastatio­n abounded.

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