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The general command of the Israeli army visits the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem April 15, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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JERUSALEM,
April 15 (Xinhua) -- "What happened to Jewish people may also happen to other
people in the world," a Holocaust survivor named Schonberger said in Yad Vashem
or Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem on Sunday shortly before the official opening
ceremony marking the Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Day.
The notorious Holocaust during World War II killed
approximately 6 million European Jews, as part of a program of deliberate
extermination planned and executed by the National Socialist (Nazi) regime in
Germany led by Adolf Hitler. As one of the survivors from the Auschwitz, the
largest Nazi concentration camp, Schonberger urged more efforts to be exerted in
education about the Holocaust. "It should never happen again," Shonberger told
Xinhua.
An unknown, but a very large number of Jews were
killed in the Auschwitz concentration camp located in southern Poland during the
Holocaust. Some estimates put the figure of the victims at around1 million.
Another survivor Lustig showed concern that for
younger generation the education on Holocaust is very complicated. The event,
starting from 8 p.m. (1700 GMT), was attended by Israel's top leaders, foreign
diplomats, Holocaust survivors as well as delegations from abroad and Israeli
soldiers.
During the ceremony, six torches were lit by
Holocaust survivors in memory of the 6 million Jewish victims in the Holocaust.
Short videos of each torch lighter's testimony on their personal experience
during Holocaust were shown before audience.
Israel's Acting President Dalia Itzik and Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert addressed the participants.
Itzik said, "today, we reinforce our role as
messengers, of the past and for the future - to remember and remind. We have no
right to forgive or forget, only to witness and testify."
Speaking at the ceremony, Olmert spoke of the
importance commemorating the Holocaust, and its role in the future of Israel's
existence.
On Monday morning, as every year, a two-minute siren
will blare at 10 a.m. (0700 GMT) across the country at the start of a series of
day-long ceremonies throughout the country. Yad Vashem will hold most of the
activities, including Wreath-laying ceremony, meetings with survivors,
recitation of Holocaust victims' names as well as screening of Holocaust-related
films and concerts.
The central theme of this year's ceremony is "Bearing
witness." "Bearing witness, so they will know, until the last generation," Yad
Vashem officials explain the meaning of the theme.
All places of entertainment are closed on Sunday
night. Local TV channels either halted programs or showed movies about Holocaust
such as Academy Award winner Schindlers' s List on Channel 10.
Approximately 250,000 Holocaust survivors are
estimated to be currently living in the Jewish state.
More than 21,000 non-Jews have been recognized as
"Righteous Among the Nations" by Yad Vashem, including two Chinese PanJunshun
and Ho Fengshan.
Pan Junshun, a Chinese living in Ukraine, helped Jewish children. And Ho Fengshan, a then Chinese diplomat in Austria, issued visas to many Jews in helping them flee the country occupied by Hitler's troops at the time.
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