- Cultural Calendar
Today — January 27 — marks the liberation of Auschwitz by Allied troops in 1945, now honored annually as Holocaust Remembrance Day. The tragedy of what those troops discovered there and at the other concentration camps must be remembered.
Each year on this day of commemoration, it is important that all of us observe and share the day — both to honor the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust and the millions of other victims of Nazism, as well as to educate and remind us all of its occurrence as a cautionary lesson to help end the genocides still occurring today while working to prevent future ones.
As hateful, racist, and divisive rhetoric and ideologies have risen in volume, it is more important than ever to provide Holocaust education to emphasize the truth of the horrors of the Holocaust.
The only antidote to hate, silence, denial and misinformation is education, observance, awareness, and speech. Nearly eighty years later, we can achieve this by acknowledging the trauma that remains, by promoting and implementing educational observance and remembrance, by sharing the stories of survivors, by caring for historic sites, and by promoting education, documentation, facts, and research.
Let us all learn from the past and protect the future. As genocide, hate crimes, and atrocities continue to occur across the world — as we combat racism, antisemitism, and hate, the lessons of the Holocaust have never been more urgent.
Honor the significance of this day by listening to or sharing stories of Holocaust survivors, by visiting a local Holocaust Museum or memorial, by lighting a candle in remembrance, and by simply sharing information and awareness of Holocaust Day on social media.
Learn more at:
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
https://www.ushmm.org/remember/international-holocaust-remembrance-day
Holocaust Survival Stories (World Jewish Congress):