USA TODAY US Edition

Events mark Holocaust Remembranc­e Day

- Jeanine Santucci and Jose R. Gonzalez USA TODAY NETWORK Santucci reports for USA TODAY; Gonzalez reports for the Arizona Republic. Contributi­ng: Veer Mudambi, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette; The Palm Springs Desert Sun; The Associated Press

Decades after the Holocaust, stark memories of a German concentrat­ion camp creep back to 83-year-old Dirk van Leenan, who spent the week leading up to Saturday’s Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day educating Arizona students on the atrocity.

“I have nightmares about it sometimes,” van Leenen said about the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp where he and his family were sent when he was 5 in an interview with The Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Saturday marked the 79th anniversar­y of the day Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz, the concentrat­ion camp complex where over 1 million people were murdered by Nazis between 1940 and 1945, the vast majority of them Jews. Altogether, Nazis killed 6 million European Jews during the Holocaust.

Since Jan. 27 was designated Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day in 2005 by the United Nations, the day has drawn survivors and their communitie­s together across the U.S. to remember the lives lost and remind of the importance of combating antisemiti­sm.

“It’s important that when we say never forget, that we never forget, and part of that is showing up and listening to the voices of those who experience­d the Holocaust and their families,” said Massachuse­tts state Sen. Robyn Kennedy at an event commemorat­ing the Warsaw ghetto uprising on Friday.

The 2024 remembranc­e events come over three months after about 1,200 Israeli civilians were killed, and over 200 taken hostage, by the militant group Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, widely regarded as the deadliest day for Jewish people since the Holocaust. The war has also claimed the lives of over 26,000 Palestinia­ns, Gaza officials have said.

Mary Jane Rein, executive director of Clark University’s Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, said at a Friday event commemorat­ing the 1943 Warsaw ghetto uprising in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, that “violence and murderous attacks against Jews were on the rise long before Oct. 7.”

“On this somber Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, we hold the Jewish community and the people of Israel close in our hearts,” President Joe Biden said in a statement.

Arizona Holocaust survivor educates students to mark day

All week, van Leenen recounted surviving a Nazi concentrat­ion camp to a room full of Phoenix-area children in an effort to teach young people about the dangers of antisemiti­sm.

Dirk van Leneen is one of approximat­ely 38,400 living Holocaust survivors in the U.S., according to a study published by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Some 65 Holocaust survivors currently reside in metro Phoenix, including some older than 100, according to the Phoenix Holocaust Associatio­n’s records.

Van Leneen’s father was part of the resistance in the Netherland­s, which van Leenen says saved more than 1,000 Jews who were relocated to different parts of the country and placed in hiding. Van Leenen was 5 years old when he and his family were sent in 1945 to Bergen-Belsen – the same German concentrat­ion camp where a 16-year-old Anne Frank died of typhus earlier that same year. Two days after they arrived, the camp was liberated April 15, 1945, by the British army.

As Arizona attempts to improve the education of students about the Holocaust, van Leenen told students about the harshness of witnessing camp prisoners die from starvation, falling into “heaps of dead bodies” with their lifeless faces visible.

People around the world decry antisemiti­sm Saturday

At the site of the Auschwitz camp, a group of about 20 survivors of various death camps are set to gather Saturday, lay wreaths and say prayers to memorializ­e the lives lost.

According to the museum that now stands there, the theme of the 79th anniversar­y is the human being, “symbolical­ly visualised by the faces of the people imprisoned at Auschwitz, immortalis­ed in drawings made during the existence of the camp and after the war.”

World leaders in Germany, Ukraine, Italy and elsewhere gave speeches in remembranc­e. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that his country would continue to carry the responsibi­lity for this “crime against humanity.”

“‘Never again’ is every day,” Scholz said in his weekly video podcast. “Jan. 27 calls out to us: Stay visible! Stay audible! Against antisemiti­sm, against racism, against misanthrop­y – and for our democracy.”

In the U.S., libraries planned commemorat­ive events with testimonie­s about local connection­s to the Holocaust. In Columbus, Ohio, Kehilat Sukkat Shalom and First Unitarian Community Church planned an evening of works including several by composers and writers who perished in or survived the Holocaust.

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