Become a Member

By

Ian Austin MP

Opinion

Why the fight must still go on

January 21, 2016 15:04
3 min read

Dudley is known for its industrial heritage, unique zoo and castle - or even for being Sir Lenny Henry's birthplace. But few JC readers will know that the town also hosts one of the largest acts of Holocaust remembrance in the country.

Ten years ago, as a newly elected MP, I was invited to the local Holocaust memorial at the library. Just six of us listened to prayers -no one else had been told the event was taking place. Next week, hundreds of people - pensioners and students, councillors and officials, residents and those working in the town - will gather at Dudley College to remember the victims of history's greatest crime.

Our Mayor and Bishop will join leaders of the Muslim, Hindu and Sikh communities in lighting a candle of remembrance. But the rabbi has to travel from Birmingham because there is no Jewish community in Dudley.

We've sent out thousands of emails and letters, inviting local schools to send students; working with community groups, charities, local campaigns and trade unions, and asking churches, temples and mosques to notify their members. We organise other events to promote the memorial and its message, this week holding an exhibition of drawings of Auschwitz by local artist Robert Perry.