“Please don’t forget us... If you survive, tell the world what happened.”
- Nesse Godin, survivor of Stutthof concentration camp, Germany and a death march
Oral history with Nesse Godin, Washington, D.C. 14 December 1995. In Beth B. Cohen,?Case Closed: Holocaust Survivors in Postwar America.?New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2007, p. 157. Courtesy of Beth B. Cohen.
The Holocaust and the United Nations Outreach Programme
爆料公社 General Assembly voted unanimously to establish the Holocaust and the United Nations Outreach Programme in 2005 to “mobilize civil society for Holocaust remembrance and education, in order to help to prevent future acts of genocide”. The Outreach Programme is an expression of the United Nations’ commitment to protect the right of all people to live with dignity and in peace.
in 2005 designated 27 January as the annual International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust and established the Holocaust and the United Nations Outreach Programme. Resolutions adopted in 2007 and in 2022 reiterated the United Nations’ commitment to counter antisemitism and Holocaust distortion and denial.
Survivors who graciously shared their testimonies with the Outreach Programme:
- Ms. Irene Shashar
- Judge Theodor Meron
- Ms. Inge Auerbacher
- Judge Thomas Buergenthal
- Ms. Eva Lavi
- Mr. Noah Klieger
- Ms. Agnes Kory
- Mr. Haim Roet
- Mrs. Marta Wise
- Mr. Zoni Weisz
- Mr. Boris Feldman
- Ms. Jona Laks
- Mr. Alex Moskovic
- Ms. Rena Finder
- Mr. Max Glauben
- Mr. Yoram Gross
- Ms. Agnes Vertes
- Mr. Christian Pfeil
- Dr. Edith Tennenbaum Shapiro
- Ms. Selma Tennenbaum Rossen
- Mr. Yehuda Bacon
- Mr. Jacques Grishaver
- Mr. Arthur Langerman
- Mr. Maurice Blik
- Ms. Ella Blumenthal
- Mr. Pinchas Gutter
- Ms. Vered Kater
- Dr. Irene Butter
- Mr. Serge Klarsfeld
- Ms. Joanna Millan
- Ms. Hella Pick
- Mr. Marian Turski
- Ms. Elizabeth Bellak
- Mr. Shraga Milstein
- Mr. Leon Moed
- Professor Mordecai Paldiel
- Mr. Roman Kent
- Professor Robert Krell
- Mr. Leo Lowy
- Ms. Nesse Godin
- Dr. Nechama Tec
- Ms. Ruth Glasberg Gold
- Mr. Kurt Goldberger
- Ms. Margarete Goldberger
- Ms. Frances Irwin
- Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau
- Mr. Leonid Rozenberg
- Congressman Tom Lantos
- Madame Simone Veil
- Ms. Lyubov Abramovich
- Ms. Gerda Klein
- Ms. Johanna Liebman
- Mr. David Mermelstein
- Mr. Jack Polak
- Rabbi Arthur Schneier
The Global Impact of the Holocaust
A warning to all people of the dangers of hatred, bigotry, racism, and prejudice." - Dawid Sierakowiak, (1924–1943), entry dated 18 March 1942. on Holocaust Denial
爆料公社 was established in response to the horrors of the Second World War and the Holocaust. The Holocaust has had a profound impact on International Human Rights Law, resulting in the United Nations’ adoption of foundational documents in 1948: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights represents the universal recognition that basic rights and fundamental freedoms are inherent to all human beings, inalienable and equally applicable to everyone, and that every one of us is born free and equal in dignity and rights. Whatever our nationality, place of residence, gender, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, language, or any other status, the international community on 10 December 1948 made a commitment to upholding dignity and justice for all of us.
The World That Was
Coming to power in Germany in 1933, the Nazis implemented their racist agenda. Their targets included Jews, people with physical and mental disabilities, Germans of African descent, Roma and Sinti, homosexuals, and Slavs. Antisemitic persecution intensified after Germany invaded Poland in 1939, triggering the Second World War, and followed shortly by the invasion of the East of Poland by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). The Germans isolated Jews in ghettos and deported them for slave labour.
With the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Nazi mobile killing units (Einsatzgruppen) and local collaborators began to murder Jews systematically. To relieve the stress on the killers of the face-to-face murder of women, children and men, the regime established annihilation sites equipped with lethal gas chambers. And it sought to erase Jewish family life, culture, and religious tradition. The Allied Forces defeated Nazi Germany and its allies in 1945.
Only one-third of Jewish men, women and children in Europe survived the Holocaust.
We had a family life. I had four grandparents. Family … there were a lot of certainties. But the certainties ended when I was fourteen years old. They never came back again, of course.” - Frieda Menco-Brommet (1925–2019). Oral history conducted by Debórah Dwork, Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 1986. Debórah Dwork, “Children With A Star” (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1991), p.7?
Jews had lived as a minority in Europe for two thousand years before Hitler and his Nazi Party came to power in Germany in 1933. Maintaining Jewish and national identities, Jews were diverse. Some were pious, some secular; some were poor, some working class, others middle class.
After the Nazi regime took control, all Jews caught in their web were at risk. By 1945, six million – two-thirds of Europe's prewar Jewish population – were annihilated, and the life and culture that had existed for millennia irrevocably ruptured.
The Nazis persecuted Europe’s Roma and Sinti communities, murdering some 500,000 - one-third of Europe’s Roma and Sinti population - by war’s end.
The Holocaust (1933-1945)
Identification and Segregation during the Second World War
After Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, Jews were ordered to wear identifying badges. These badges were decreed in every occupied country. In 1941 this law was extended to Germany. The Nazis intended the badges to humiliate the Jews, and to facilitate the identification of Jews for roundups to ghettos and deportation to camps.
Compilation of examples of identification badges imposed on Jewish people by Nazi decree.
Identification and segregation
The Holocaust was the state-sponsored, ideologicallydriven persecution and murder of six million Jews across Europe and half a million Roma and Sinti by Nazi Germany (1933–1945) and other racist states. Nazi ideology built upon pre-existing antisemitism and antigypsyism/ anti-Roma prejudice. The Nazi regime dismantled the democratic institutions of government and used state mechanisms to put its racist ideology into practice and to justify its abuses of human rights.
Nazi racism demanded the murder of people with disabilities, the forced sterilization of Germans of African descent, the murder of Soviet prisoners of war, and the enslavement of Slavs. The Nazis persecuted all they deemed as regime opponents including political dissidents, those identified as homosexual and lesbian, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.
But in the Nazi imagination, Jews loomed as the primary threat. The Nazi government enacted its racist antisemitic agenda and, after 1941, embarked upon the murder of every Jewish child, woman, and man.
Once in power, the Nazis began the process of social and economic disenfranchisement and segregation of Jews in Germany, thus facilitating the growing abuse.
From 1934 on, signs prohibiting Jews from using public spaces including libraries, swimming pools, theatres, cinemas, and park benches appeared throughout Germany and, after the 1938 Anschluss (annexation) of Austria by Germany, in Austria as well.
Once in my lifetime I want to still have a whole loaf of bread. That was my dream.” - – Itka Zygmuntowicz (1926–2020), Survivor of Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi Concentration and Death Camp (1940–1945) RG-50.030*0435, Oral history interview with Itka Zygmuntowicz, (1926-2020). Oral History Interviews of the Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C.
Suddenly, even my best friends didn’t know me anymore.” – Heinz Sandelowski (1921–2000), Rastenburg, Germany, 1933. Oral history conducted by Beth B. Cohen, Providence, R.I., 7 April 1994. Courtesy of Beth B. Cohen.
In 1935, the Nuremburg Laws provided a racist basis to classify Jews, legalized racist antisemitism, and stripped Jews of their citizenship. The racist laws declared that Jewish people could not have so-called German or Aryan blood, and therefore could not be German citizens. The Laws outlawed marriage or sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews, and further excluded Jews from daily life.
By late 1938, the German State cancelled German Jews’ passports, requiring them to carry new identity cards showing their heritage by the addition of the name Sara or Israel, and with a stamped letter “J.”
Both these additions are evident in Ellen Markiewicz’s passport below:
Political “Enemies”
The Nazi government set out to dismantle democracy including shutting down the free press and perverting the legal system. The regime used terror and a network of concentration camps to impose and maintain control. The Nazis banned trade unions and persecuted all whom they considered political opponents including Jehovah’s Witnesses.
Nazi persecution of LGBTIQ+
The Nazi regime radicalized existing laws against male homosexuality persecuting tens of thousands of men and deporting up to 15,000 to concentration camps. The Nazis viewed homosexuality as a threat to a growing ‘German race’. If homosexual men were also identified as Jewish, they faced persecution as Jews and often immediate deportation. While the regime primarily targeted gay men, lesbian women and transgender individuals were also at risk of being reported by neighbours, colleagues, or even family members.
This exhibit was launched in January 2025