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Survivors back bid to include modern-day genocides in national Holocaust Memorial

Holocaust survivor Martin Stern stressed the need for the new memorial to commemorate modern-day atrocities such as those in Rwanda and Bosnia, as well as recording the slaughter of six million Jews in the Shoah.

January 23, 2018 14:04
Terezin camp survivor Martin Stern
2 min read

Holocaust survivors have joined MPs to back a move to open an atrocity prevention centre at the new national Holocaust Memorial  being built in Westminster.

At an event attended by the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, on Monday, Martin Stern, a Terezin camp survivor, stressed the need to for the new memorial in the shadow of Parliament to commemorate modern-day atrocities such as those in Rwanda and Bosnia, as well recording the slaughter of six million Jews in the Shoah.

 “There are people who feel that the Holocaust is unique and should not be used for any other purposes - I strongly disagree,” said Dr Stern. “The whole point of putting a Holocaust Memorial right next to the Houses of Parliament is to teach a lesson and if that lesson is not applied in the future it invalidates the Holocaust Memorial.

“Nobody can bring back the six million who were killed – all we can do is work upon the future.”