Holocaust Remembrance Day 2016

International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2016

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    ​“It is our common responsibility to inform and educate our children, populations and institutions about the Shoah, in order that such crimes will never happen again.” These are the words of Ambassador Manor on 25 January for the first of a series of four events marking the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust.
    Thanks to the collaboration of several Permanent Missions and the UNOG, important events took place, each shedding the light on a specific aspect of the atrocities of the Holocaust.

     
  • Screening of Son of Saul

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    ​​​Organized in partnership with the Permanent Mission of Hungary and the Club Suisse de le Presse, the screening of the award winning movie Son of Saul, gathered 150 diplomats on Monday 25 January 2016 in Les Scala Cinema.

    The screening was preceded by a panel which brought together Géza Röhrig, lead actor, Prof. Gideon Greif, Israel historian and author of We Wept Without Tears, as well as Ms. Viola Gurisev-Pap from the IHRA.

    This event was a unique opportunity to understand further the death industry Auschwitz-Birkenau was, through the eyes of the Sonderkommandos, these Jewish​ men forced to serve in the gas chambers and the crematorium of the Nazi extermination camps. Son of Saul sheds light in a unique artisitc way on this both tragic and important aspect of the Holocaust.

    As Géza Röhrig said: "Even during their times, the Sonderkommando members were writing secretly documents that they were burying in the grounds of Auschwitz. To let the world know that even though they were going to disappear with no trace, they wanted us to know what happen to them, and what happen to the Jewish people".

    Read Ambassador Manor opening remark


  • Exhibition “Family Camp”

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    The EU, Czech and Polish Delegations to the UN sponsored the exhibition “The Family Camp” - opened at the United Nations office in Geneva on 27 January 2016- to mark the International Day for the commemoration of the victims of the Holocaust. This exhibition uses the story of the Terezín Ghetto, infamously used by the Nazi regime in 1944 as a "showcase" facility for an international community inspection, and of the so-called "Family Camp" in Birkenau to which a large number of Terezín prisoners were later transferred, to illustrate the brutality of the "Final Solution" policy and, on the other hand, of the humanity retained, against all odds, by the prisoners.
    The art on display, including poetry and drawings by the prisoners, many of whom were children, chillingly brings to life the horrors of the Holocaust.

    On this occasion, which gathered close to 200 diplomats and UN officials, Ambassador Manor said: “throughout the war, the Terezin inmates embroiled themselves in creative artistic activity. Music pieces, poems, theatre plays, paintings and drawings survived their authors and artists and are testimonies to their vital spirit in the face of their tormentors' efforts to exterminate them. This was their way to preserve their human dignity. To the end, the Nazis failed to destroy the Jewish spirit and soul. In the midst of destruction, the Jewish inmates of Terezin created. Their human spirit soared above their captors' barbarism. This, to me, is the embodiment of courage.

    The exhibition remained at the entrance of the Assembly Hall from 25 to 29 January, where hundreds of visitors stopped by.

    Read the remarks from:


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  • Testimony of Mrs. Paulette Angel-Rosenberg, Holocaust Survivor

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    Source: OHCHR

    In May 1940, Paulette Angel-Rosenberg was living in Metz, France with her family, when they were forced to flee from their home. They were Jewish and German troops had just seized Metz. She was 12 years old.

    Paulette Angel-Rosenberg served as the keynote speaker at the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of Holocaust Victims in Geneva, Switzerland. The family would move from town to town until they finally settled into a small village, where they hoped they would be safe.

    “We were happy, we were together,” Angel-Rosenberg, now 88, recalled.

    But this happiness was not to last. In 1942, Angel-Rosenberg and her family would find themselves facing one of the several rounding up of Jews in France during World War II.

    She shared her experience as a Holocaust survivor during her keynote address at a Holocaust memorial ceremony held at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland on the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust.

    The event was organized by the United Nations at Geneva and, in partnership with the Permanent Mission of Israel and the Permanent Delegation of the European Union. The World Jewish Congress introduced Angel-Rosenberg to the United Nations. 

    In a statement made to mark the day, UN Human Rights Chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said, “The Holocaust will forever remain a terrible scar on the human conscience…Today, as we commemorate the victims of the Holocaust, I hope that all of us can reflect on the need to continue to combat racism and religious or ethnic intolerance in every form, and with all our might.” 

    “This is our solemn duty to the memory of the victims: to demonstrate civic courage, and responsible governance,” he said. “We must prevent future acts of genocide by meeting the challenge that humanity still faces today – the task of learning to live together, as equals, in dignity, and with respect.”  

    Angel-Rosenberg and her family had heard from others that this roundup was occurring in Paris, but believed they were safe because they were French and at the time they were only arresting foreign Jews. However, they soon found out that the Germans occupying France wanted to eliminate all Jews. 

    In just two days, from 16 to 17 July, over 13,000 Jews would be arrested, deported to Drancy and then murdered in Auschwitz. A few days later, French Jews would be the next group to be deported to Drancy.  

    This is when they realized they needed to try to travel further into a “safe zone” that would keep them from being arrested and deported. Her family made the difficult decision to separate and travel in pairs.

    Her father paid smugglers to take her and her sister Sophie on the journey to ensure their safety. The smugglers told them that they notified the authorities after which they were arrested.  

    Angel-Rosenberg and her sister would stay there for three weeks until the head of the prison told them that they would leave for Drancy, the last stop before death. Angel-Rosenberg was 15.

    “But, we’re French sir, we were born here,” she told the officer.

    It didn’t matter. They were put on a train for Drancy, the last stop before death.  

    Their nightmare would come to end though. The remaining prisoners were released from Drancy by the end of the year and not deported to Auschwitz. They were soon reunited with her parents in a town near Grenoble, an unoccupied area at the time, where many Jewish refugees were living.

    Her family wouldn’t all be together for long because her father was arrested, tortured and killed by the Nazis. He died only three weeks before the end of the war.

    After the war, she would move back to Metz with her mother and sister and in 1953, she moved to Switzerland.

    She continues to share her story so that people will never forget the horrors that happened not so long ago in Europe.

    “We must never allow another Shoah [Holocaust],” she concluded.

    With strength and courage, Paulette met 150 secondary school students on 28 January. A moving morning where the teenagers identified themselves in Paulette's story. Many swore her: "We will never forget you, nor your friends who have been deported and killed in Auschwitz."



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