Remembrance Day Ceremony marks 80th Anniversary of Auschwitz Liberation
Exactly eighty years ago, Red Army soldiers liberated the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest death camp in all of human history. From 1940 to early 1945, more than four million Jewish people were murdered and burned there, until January 27, when Russian Red Army soldiers arrived and liberated the camp.
The Chief Rabbi of Russia, Rabbi Berel Lazar Shlita, who opened the ceremony with a stirring speech, shared the story of the family Holocaust on his mother’s side and said: My mother, may she live and be well, was born in Hungary in 1941. Hungary was then a close ally of the Nazis, almost all of Hungary’s Jews were sent to concentration camps and murdered. And my mother was saved only because there were people who risked their lives and saved Jews…
The Rabbi continued his poignant words, in front of dozens of ambassadors from around the world and many journalists who filled the venue: The Lubavitcher Rebbe said that the key to all morality, to all respect, to peace and coexistence is solely faith and love for God, who sees all our actions and hears all our words. Human life is a precious gift from the Creator, and it is humanity’s duty to protect it with care. Yes, more than eighty years have passed since those terrible days when the Nazi death machines were in operation. There are almost no people left who survived the tragedy of the Holocaust themselves. But we – the generations of their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren – will always remember and talk about it, we will talk about it at home, in schools, on the street. We will continue to be proud of our connection with God and will affix mezuzahs to the doors of every Jewish home. We will do everything to live in peace. But at the same time, we must continue the struggle against Hitler’s heirs. We must not give up. And we must not make peace not only with those who plot to organize a new Holocaust in the twenty-first century, but also with those who talk about the “rights” of pogroms and call for a “compromise” with them. Only in this way can the civilized world make a repeat of the Holocaust truly impossible!
The event was held, as every year, at the World War II memorial complex, in the Jewish Museum, located in the Marina Roshcha neighborhood in central Moscow. It was hosted by the spokesman for the Jewish communities in Russia, Rabbi Baruch Gorin.
The Russian President sent a special letter with his representatives in which he says, among other things:
“International Holocaust Remembrance Day is a date of mourning of immense moral importance. In January 1945, the Red Army liberated the Auschwitz camp, revealing to humanity the truth about
the crimes of the Nazis and their accomplices, who annihilated millions of Jews, Russians, Gypsies and peoples of other nations. And we will forever remember that it was the Soviet soldier who crushed this absolute and terrible evil, achieving a victory whose greatness will remain forever in world history. I would like to sincerely thank all those who remain committed to preserving historical truth and combating neo-Nazi revisionism, to those who contribute their part to this significant and comprehensive work, which is especially vital in the 80th year of the Great Victory. I expect that the Russian Jewish community, the organizers of the traditional commemorative events to mark the International Holocaust Remembrance Day, will continue their multilateral activities aimed at promoting the values of humanism, tolerance and peace.”
After reciting “Kel Malei Rachamim” by the Chief Rabbi, six public figures were honored with lighting six memorial candles, in memory of the six million Holocaust martyrs. The first candle was lit by the famous Russian cultural figure Kalman Ginsek, who was sent to a ghetto in Latvia with his parents a week after his birth. The additional candles were lit by five ambassadors from countries: USA, England, Germany, Poland and Israel.
In the city of Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave within Europe, the “March of Life” was held on Sunday, in which masses of the city’s Jews marched a ten-kilometer route. The very same route upon which about seven thousand martyrs who survived the ghettos marched. Towards the end of the war, the evil Nazis led them to a large killing field on the banks of the Baltic River.
The march was led by the city’s rabbi, Rabbi David Shwedik, Chabad emissary in Kaliningrad, Rabbi Avraham Baruch Deutsch, the city’s leaders and dignitaries, alongside ambassadors, representatives of the governors and the Jewish youth of the large city.