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Novosti News

24.11.2019. 19:35
Israel
 


Jerusalem, 20 November 2019) – Some 30 heads of state from around the world will attend the Fifth World Holocaust Forum, taking place on 23 January 2020, at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. The event, titled “Remembering the Holocaust, Fighting Antisemitism,” 

Oko 30  vođa država iz cijelog svijeta će sudjelovati na Petom svjetskom forumu o Holokaustu ( Fifth World Holocaust Forum),  23 siječnja  2020, u Jeruzalemu , u Yad Vashemu. Naslov Foruma je " Sjećanje na Holokaust- borba protiv antisemitizma". Organizator je  World Holocaust Forum Foundation, u suradnji sa Yad Vashemom, pod pokroviteljstvom predsjednika Izraela.  Kako se svijet priprema obilježiti 75 godišnjicu oslobađanja Auschwitza, ovo je jasna poruka da antisemitizmu nema mjesta u našem svijetu. 

Sudjelovanje su već prijavili mnogi lideri  Vladimir Putin, Emmanuel Macron,Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Sergio Mattarella, Alexander Van der Bellen, Stefan Löfven  i mnogi drugi.

Sastanak se održava u ozračju rasta mržnje i nasilnog antisemitizma, osobito u Europi. Zbog te situacije koja poziva na alarm, potrebno je educirati o opasnostima antisemitizma, rasizma i ksenofobije te poticati komemoracije Holokausta i istraživanja, te je   upravo zato taj Forum značajniji više nego ikada prije......


Dalje čitajte govor Avner Shaleva, voditelja Yad Vashema.

“The Holocaust has become a paradigm to measure the human capacity to engage in radical, cruel and systematic evil, not only because of its unprecedented scope – the murder of six million Jewish men, women and children – but also because of the ‘rationale”‘ behind Nazi ideology – the extermination of the Jewish people as a way to protect their own national interests and that of the “pure German race.” The ability of an advanced society to justify the eradication of an entire people and culture was supported and even encouraged by age-old antisemitic tropes, some of which are present in our post-Holocaust global society.
“Yad Vashem works tirelessly to increase the knowledge and awareness of the history of the Holocaust, not only to ensure that its memory continues to be relevant 75 years after the end of WWII, but also as a tool to fight antisemitism, racism and xenophobia, alarming phenomena that are on the rise around the world today.”