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Auschwitz Legacy and Remembrance

May 1st is the Holocaust Remembrance Day. Being born and raised in Poland I've visited Auschwitz Concentration Camp and was always interested in World War II history.

In 2006, the United Nations General Assembly designated January 27 as an annual international day of commemoration to honor the victims of the Nazi era. This date marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi concentration camp. "Denying historical facts, especially on such an important subject as the Holocaust, is just not acceptable. Nor is it acceptable to call for the elimination of any State or people " stated Ban-Ki Moon, United Nations Secretary General during the assembly.

I am native Polish and my father was a prisoner of Potulice Concentration Camp for children during World War II. From my first visit to Auschwitz as a 10 year old child I can only remember the barracks, gas chambers and the Execution Wall as well as overwhelming feeling of sadness for all of those innocent people who died; many of then Jews and Poles. During my second visit in 2007 I have purchased the English version of a book by Krystyna Zywulska "I survived Auschwitz" which gave me a very deep insight into the life of a Jewish woman (her real name was Sonia Landau) who survived the atrocities of the notorious Nazi extermination camp and managed to escape. Her memoirs were published in 1946 right after the war and it was one of the first books written by Auschwitz concentration camp survivor.

Through her eyes we can see the price of courage, terrible urge to live half-starved, suffering from lice, scabies, dysentery, moved down by typhus and pneumonia. She worked with other women in the fields of icy slush and mud but finally was given an opportunity to get out of that hell. This book deserves more worldwide publishing, since it is only available in Poland through the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, because most of her companions were murdered so that would not bear witness. I was looking at the place where thousands of bodies were burned and at the small plaques on the railroad tracks in Birkenau. One of them read: "To all the babies that were never born and to all the women that were never married, we remember".

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We should never forget such pivotal moments in history of mankind. The legacy of Holocaust is one of the most important lessons in history. Our generation learns about it from books, such as Elie Wiesel's "Night" or "Diary of a Young Girl" by Anne Frank, movies like "Schindler's List" or "Sophie's Choice", history books or stories told by those are still among us, those who survived. Holocaust was and still is a diabolic journey of atrocity, horror, suffering and destruction through the ashes, the corpses, and the hell of inhumanity. It is amazing that some young people, just like us, maintained their dignity and good spirits in the eye of the storm 60 something years ago. Anne Frank was a Jewish teenage girl growing up in Amsterdam, forced to go into hiding during Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, so that she could avoid persecution with her family. After they were captured and transported to concentration camps, Anne left her diary behind in their flat in Amsterdam to be found by her father right after the war. Who would have known that a diary of teenager will become one of the most widely read books about Holocaust worldwide? Anne Frank wrote her diary during the most challenging times of her life, yet she still believed in people. "It's a wonder I haven't abandoned all my ideals, they seem so absurd and impractical. Yet I cling to them because I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are truly good at heart". (written July 15, 1944) This is the best advice we can find for young people today who want to stand up for humanity and make a difference. Anne Frank wrote her diary during the most challenging times of her life, yet she still believed in people. Anne's life and death were her own individual fate, an individual fate that happened six million times over. As Eleanor Roosevelt said that Anne's diary was: "one of the wisest and most moving commentaries on war and its impact on human beings that I have ever read".

Holocaust and genocide existed since the beginning of civilization and its root always came from one group of people destroying and annihilating another, so that they can be in absolute power. In the first millennium B.C. during the Peloponnesian War the Aegean island of Melos has been completely destroyed by Athens and not a single person survived according to Thucydides in his "Melian Dialogue". .The Mongol horsemen of Genghis Khan in the 13th century were known for killing entire nations leaving nothing but empty ruins and bones. The indigenous populations of the New World after Christopher Columbus' discovery have been reduced and up to this day president Chavez of Venezuela blames Columbus for leading the way in the mass genocide of the Native Americans by the Spanish. Let's not forget the French Revolution, Northern Ireland massacres, Ukrainian Famine in Soviet Union in 1933 or the most recent ones such as Sarajevo, Rwanda, Darfur and Congo. We see it in the news every day and it is not inspiring or motivating for us even though we don't have to live in fear of persecution we still need to be aware each and every day of what is happening around us and to see others as valuable members of society in spite of our cultural, racial or religious differences.

No matter how secure we think we are it could happen anywhere. We think of America as the great hero of World War II, but there is plenty of xenophobia in this country and we are still working on eliminating hatred of immigrants, anti-Semitism, racism or just plain prejudice against individuals who don't meet our standards. Imagine that each person we meet wears an invisible sign on his or her back that says; "Make me feel important!" The attitude of acceptance and willingness to co-exist can move mountains and make this world a better place to live. We start in our own circle of influence, in our workplace, school, on the street, anywhere we come in contact with people who are simply different than us. We have to start locally but think globally, just like with the environment, to save our humanity and dignity. It's never too late.

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