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World Pauses to Commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day

Commemorations on the anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation by the Red Army on January 27, 1945, are taking place across Europe.
Commemorations on the anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation by the Red Army on January 27, 1945, are taking place across Europe.
world pauses to commemorate international holocaust remembrance day
Holocaust survivor Stanislaw Zalewski walks in the Auschwitz Nazi death camp museum during a ceremony marking the 81th anniversary of the camp's liberation in Oswiecim, Poland, January 27, 2026. Photo: Beata Zawrzel/AP
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Warsaw: Candles flickered at dawn Tuesday at the vast Holocaust memorial in Berlin as people across Europe and beyond paused to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day, reflecting on Nazi Germany's murder of millions of people and its attempt to completely wipe out Jewish life on the continent.

International Holocaust Remembrance Day is observed across the world on January 27, the anniversary of the liberation by Soviet forces of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the most notorious of the Nazi German death camps. The United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution in 2005 establishing the day as an annual commemoration.

At the memorial site of Auschwitz, in an area which was under German occupation during World War II, former prisoners laid flowers and wreaths at the Execution Wall, where German forces murdered thousands of people, most of them Poles. Later in the day Poland's President Karol Nawrocki will join survivors for a remembrance ceremony at Birkenau, the vast site nearby where Jews were transported from across Europe to be exterminated in gas chambers.

Nazi German forces murdered some 1.1 million people at Auschwitz, most of them Jews, but also Poles, Roma and others.

Commemorations on the anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation by the Red Army on January 27, 1945, were also taking place across Europe on Tuesday, as well as at the United Nations. Germany, the nation that inflicted war and genocide on its neighbors, is holding a commemoration in the Bundestag, the parliament, on Wednesday.

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Candles burned and white roses were placed at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, a field of 2,700 gray concrete slabs near the Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Berlin, which honors the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust. The vast site in the heart of the capital underlines Germany's remorse.

Israel marks its Holocaust Remembrance Day on the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in April 1943, which stresses Jewish resistance to the Nazi terror.

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There are an estimated 196,600 Jewish Holocaust survivors still alive globally, down from the 220,000 survivors estimated to be alive a year earlier, according new information released by the New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Nearly all of them – some 97% – are “child survivors” who were born 1928 and later, the group said.

Though the world's community of survivors shrinks with time, some are still telling their stories for the first time after all these years.

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On Sunday, the Netherlands marked its National Holocaust Memorial day with a silent march through Amsterdam’s historic Jewish quarter to a memorial to Auschwitz victims. Amsterdam Mayor Femke Halsema spoke to hundreds of people who attended the somber event.

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“Bergen-Belsen, Sobibor, Auschwitz – they are unprecedented and still incomprehensible examples of what intolerance, hatred, and racism can lead to. Unparalleled in history,” she said. The Dutch commemoration happens each year on the last Sunday in January at the Wertheim Park in Amsterdam.

(AP)

Associated Press writer Mike Corder in Amsterdam contributed to this report.

This article went live on January twenty-seventh, two thousand twenty six, at nine minutes past four in the afternoon.

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