The Jewish Chronicle

Decrease in numbers at Holocaust MD events

- BY ROSA DOHERTY

October 7 meant there were challenges

▶ THERE WAS a significan­t drop in the number of schools and organisati­ons that took part in Holocaust Memorial Day this year, due to “unpreceden­ted challenges” engaging people due to October 7, organisers said.

Uptake dropped by nearly 20 per cent compared to last year in marking the one day in the British calendar that commemorat­es victims of the Holocaust and other genocides.

Speaking at the Trust’s 2024 impact review, Olivia Marks-Woldman, HMD chief executive, said: “It was a particular­ly challengin­g year and if I didn’t mention that, it would be an elephant in the room.”

Holocaust Memorial Day was marked by 3,700 organisati­ons this year, a significan­t drop from the 4,500 which took part in 2023, but “more than we initially feared,” said Marks-Woldman.

Holocaust Memorial Day was launched in 2001 and takes place every year on January 27, the anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp.

Speaking to the JC, Marks-Woldman said: “The horrific attacks carried out by Hamas on October 7 and the subsequent war in Gaza have fuelled a rise in antisemiti­sm worldwide, including the UK.

“Certain individual­s and far-right groups have also seized upon the situation to incite anti-Muslim hate.”

The JC reported in January that some schools and minority faith communitie­s were among those who had decided not to take part in HMD events due to security concerns and fears of fuelling community tensions.

The event on Monday saw the launch of the theme for next year’s HMD, which is For A Better Future, part inspired by the challenges they faced this year, said Marks-Woldman. “We hope next year will bring people together under this banner. We need to engage in getting communitie­s together and involved in what HMD is doing.”

HMD 2025 will mark the 80th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau. “Eighty years on, silence is not an option,” Marks-Woldman said.

“Despite the challenges we are facing in bringing people together, we must go on talking about it. We have to speak up against denial and distortion.”

Lord Pickles, who is the United Kingdom’s special envoy for post-Holocaust issues, said the 2025 event may be one of the last times people get the chance to hear living testimonie­s of survivors.

He said: “It doesn’t take much for people to slip into casual dinner party antisemiti­sm, and it’s not the algorithm’s fault; it is ours.

“We’re on the front line of defending liberal democracy and need to hold on to the truth.”

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