Share and Follow

Key Points
- Auschwitz survivors marked the 80th anniversary of the camp’s liberation, warning against growing antisemitism.
- The ceremony at Auschwitz was attended by global leaders, including King Charles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong.
- Leaders stressed how important it was to preserve the memory of the Holocaust.
They did not make speeches but rather listened for perhaps the last time to those who suffered and witnessed at first hand one of humanity’s greatest atrocities.
“Let’s not be afraid to convince ourselves that we can solve problems between neighbours.”
“And the rampant antisemitism that is spreading among the nations is shocking”.
“The act of remembering the evils of the past remains a vital task, and in so doing we inform our present and shape our future,” King Charles said during a visit to the Jewish Community Centre in Krakow.
In all, between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered six million Jews across German-occupied Europe, along with gypsies, sexual minorities, people with disability and others who offended Nazi ideas of racial superiority.