FRESH AIR

Australia represented as states recommit to Holocaust remembrance

Jan 20, 2020 | Naomi Levin

Jewish people arriving at Auschwitz. 
Photo: Yad Vashem
Jewish people arriving at Auschwitz. Photo: Yad Vashem

The Australian Government recommitted to remembering the Holocaust and acknowledging contemporary antisemitism at a meeting in Europe this week.

For the first time since becoming a member of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) in 2019, Australia participated as a full member at the IHRA Ministerial Meeting held in Brussels. Australia was represented by Justin Brown, Australia’s Ambassador to the European Union, NATO, Belgium and Luxembourg.

Ambassador Brown – together with representatives of 34 other countries – endorsed the 2020 IHRA Ministerial Declaration.

Delegates at the IHRA Ministerial Meeting 2020 in Brussels.

This declaration looked both to the past and at current challenges.

75 years after the liberation of Nazi concentration camps in Germany and eastern Europe, it pledged “to the victims and survivors that they shall never be forgotten and that their legacy will be kept alive”.

Representatives also promised to promote Holocaust education, safeguard the historical record of the Holocaust and continue efforts to hold significant Holocaust commemorations.

The ongoing battle against global antisemitism – coming from the far left and the far right – was also acknowledged at the conference.

The IHRA delegates expressed “our deepest concerns about rising antisemitism” and accepted responsibility “as governments to continue working together to counter Holocaust denial and distortion, antisemitism, and all forms of racism and discrimination that undermine fundamental democratic principles”. They added “We will work closely with experts, civil society and our international partners to further these goals.”

In the past year, people have been murdered in antisemitic incidents in the United States and Germany. Globally, online antisemitism, particularly spread by the far-right via social media, continues unabated. And in the political sphere, British and American Jews have been subject to attacks by extreme left political leaders trying to disguise their antisemitism behind a flimsy veil of Israel criticism.

The declaration also reaffirmed IHRA’s founding document, the 20-year-old Declaration of the Stockholm International Forum. AIJAC’s Director of International and Community Affairs Jeremy Jones was a participant in that forum.

Lord Eric Pickles, the British Special Envoy for Post-Holocaust Issues reminded participants of their important duty: “At a time when the last survivor won’t be with us, maybe in a decade or so, it passes to us to make sure that the truth is heard,” he said.

RELATED ARTICLES


Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar (Image: Shutterstock)

Hamas’ so-called ceasefire “acceptance” is just spin to pressure Israel

May 7, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR
Aid trucks crossing into Gaza in May 2021 (image: Shutterstock/Anas-Mohammed)

Aid delivery and distribution in Gaza: Logistical and security bottlenecks

May 3, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR
Image: X/Twitter screenshot

Gaza protests not driven primarily by human rights concerns

May 3, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR, In the media
Channel 7 reporter Matt Shirvington was the first mainstream media figure to falsely claim the Bondi attacker was Jewish student Ben Cohen

Online antisemitic conspiracy theories apparently led to Channel Seven’s mistakes about Bondi attacker

Apr 22, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR
The content of 700 aid trucks waiting to be picked up by aid agencies in Gaza (image: X/COGAT)

AIJAC letter in response to Marc Purcell’s piece in the Age and Sydney Morning Herald (April 18)

Apr 22, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR
Large anti-Israel protest in Washington, DC, in October. No other issue turns out so many protestors so consistently and globally (image: Shutterstock/ Volodymyr Tverdokhlib)

Where is everybody when Israel isn’t involved?

Apr 15, 2024 | Featured, Fresh AIR

SIGN UP FOR AIJAC EMAILS

RECENT POSTS

Screenshot 2024 05 14 At 12.20.28 PM

Australian UN vote ultimately rewards the terrorism of October 7 – Natasha Hausdorff on Sky News

Screenshot 2024 05 14 At 11.47.20 AM

Australia’s support UN General Assembly resolution “very disturbing” – Colin Rubenstein on Sky News

Protesters face-off at Melbourne University (Screenshot)

Uni leaders must stand up for Jewish students

UN General Assembly Chamber (Photo: Steve Estvanik, Shutterstock)

AIJAC condemns Australia’s UN vote on ‘Palestine’ as “profoundly disappointing”

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar (Image: Shutterstock)

Hamas’ so-called ceasefire “acceptance” is just spin to pressure Israel

Screenshot 2024 05 14 At 12.20.28 PM

Australian UN vote ultimately rewards the terrorism of October 7 – Natasha Hausdorff on Sky News

Screenshot 2024 05 14 At 11.47.20 AM

Australia’s support UN General Assembly resolution “very disturbing” – Colin Rubenstein on Sky News

Protesters face-off at Melbourne University (Screenshot)

Uni leaders must stand up for Jewish students

UN General Assembly Chamber (Photo: Steve Estvanik, Shutterstock)

AIJAC condemns Australia’s UN vote on ‘Palestine’ as “profoundly disappointing”

Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar (Image: Shutterstock)

Hamas’ so-called ceasefire “acceptance” is just spin to pressure Israel

SORT BY TOPICS