January 27 was designated by the
United Nations General Assembly as International Holocaust Remembrance
Day. Since 2005, the UN and its member states have held commemoration
ceremonies to mark the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau
and to honor the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust and
millions of other victims of Nazism.
Key Facts
—The purpose of International Holocaust Remembrance Day is two-fold: to
serve as a date for official commemoration of the victims of the Nazi
regime and to promote Holocaust education throughout the world.
—Since 2010, the UN has designated specific themes for the annual
commemorations that focus on topics such as collective experiences and
universal human rights.
—In addition to International Holocaust Remembrance Day, many countries
hold national commemoration ceremonies on other dates connected to the
Holocaust.
Background
On November 1, 2005, the UN General Assembly adopted resolution 60/7 to
designate January 27 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The
date marks the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau and is meant to honor
the victims of Nazism. The same resolution supports the development of
educational programs to remember the Holocaust and to prevent further
genocide.
Resolution 60/7 not only establishes January 27 as “International Day of
Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust,” it also
rejects any form of Holocaust denial. The resolution encourages member
states of the UN to actively preserve sites that the Nazis used during
the "Final Solution" (for example, killing centers, concentration camps,
and prisons.) Drawing from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
the resolution condemns all forms of “religious intolerance, incitement,
harassment or violence against persons or communities based on ethnic
origin or religious belief” throughout the world.
Commemoration Activities
The first commemoration ceremony was held on January 27, 2006, at the UN
Headquarters in New York City. Nearly 2,200 people attended in person.
Since the ceremony was broadcast live on television, many more people
were able to view it throughout the world. The UN Headquarters holds
official commemorations each year. UN offices across the world and other
state offices also conduct their own ceremonies.
Since 2010, the UN has designated specific themes for the annual
commemorations. That year, the central theme revolved around Holocaust
survivors and the lessons they pass on to future generations. The 2011
theme focused on the experiences of women. The 2012 theme was “Children
and the Holocaust” and highlighted the effects of mass violence on
children. In 2013, remembrance events centered on individuals and groups
who risked their lives “to save tens of thousands of Jews, Roma and
Sinti and others from near certain death under the Nazi regime during
the Second World War in Europe.”
The 2014 theme focused on journeys through the Holocaust—from
deportation to liberation. In 2015, the central idea was how the
experiences of the Holocaust shaped the founding of the UN. The 2016
theme explored the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights' connection to the Holocaust.
In 2015, 39 countries participated in International Holocaust
Remembrance Day commemoration ceremonies. Remembrance activities varied
by country. Some hosted lectures and presentations on different topics,
while others showed films and documentaries on the Holocaust. Other
countries lit candles or read the names of victims of the Nazi regime.
In addition to observing International Holocaust Remembrance Day, many
of the participating countries have established their own remembrance
days that are often connected to events from the Holocaust. For example,
Argentina legislated April 19, the day of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, as
the national Day for Cultural Diversity. Hungary designated April 16 as
National Holocaust Remembrance Day, commemorating the establishment of
the ghetto in Munkács. In 1979, the United States Congress established
Days of Remembrance that usually take place between April and early May
to commemorate victims of the Nazi regime. The US Days of Remembrance
correspond to Yom Ha-Shoah, Israel's annual Holocaust Remembrance Day. |
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