CNN
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World leaders will be held in Poland on Monday on the 80th anniversary of the Holocaust Memorial Day and Nazi Germany’s Auschwitz Burkina detention camp.
Britain’s King King Charles, German Chancellor Olaf Schulz and French President Emmanuel Macron are among those attending the event, which will begin with the tent on the notorious entrance of the former Death Camp.
All of Auschwitz are left. Survivors are invited to memorial events and they can bring a person for help.
“We are fully aware of how difficult and emotional taxes can be imposed for them,” said the Auschwitz Memorial and Museum in a statement.
Michael Bornestin, who lived in Auschwitz for seven months in childhood, said “nothing will be easy to return.”
One of the signs of 80Third Anniversary is a freight train car, which will be placed directly in front of the main gate. The train car is dedicated to about 420,000 Hungary Jews who were deported to Auschwitz.
From 1940 to 1945, the detention camp killed about 1.1 million people, many of whom were Jews, but other victims of Third Reich, including Paul, Roma and Soviet war prisoners.
The United Nations celebrated January 27, 2005 as the International Holocaust Memorial Day. Celebrated every year, it is a day of independence for Auschwitz in 1945 and remembers the six million Jews who lost their lives under it. Nazis.
The museum says Monday offers a joint memorial and global reflection.
This comes at a time when the growing hostility in Europe was caused by conflict in the Middle East, which in response to the terrorist attacks by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7, 2023 The war started.
According to a survey by the European Union Agency for Basic Rights (FRA) published in June, the incidence of hostility in Europe has increased since October 2023, with some Jewish community organizations report more than 400 %.
76% of the FRA survey says they at least hide their Jewish identity and avoid 34% of Jewish events or sites because of feeling unsafe.
“Europe is witnessing a wave of enmity, which partially conflicts in the Middle East. It strictly restricts the ability to protect Jewish people with dignity,” FRA director Sarpa Rutio. Said
Events in the Middle East have also increased Islamic phobic events across Europe, including firearms, verbal and physical abuse and targeting mosques.