Fred Nile: on the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, never forget the Holocaust

Christian Democrat politician Fred Nile reminds us that today is a significant anniversary. The liberation of Auschwitz on this day in 1945 is marked as the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust.

The world must never forget the horrors of the Holocaust.

The murderous evil of the Nazi war machine must be remembered for the sake of the persecuted and to prevent future atrocities.

I saw the possessions of those who were murdered are still stored in huge storage sheds. Hair, artificial limbs, suitcases and other personal possessions.

On January 27, 1945, soldiers of the Soviet Union liberated the persecuted souls who were prisoners of the infamous Auschwitz Camp in Poland. Over 1.1 million Jews, 75,000 Poles, 20,000 gypsies and others were brutally murdered. [Editor’s note: The wider  Nazi genocide included six million Jews, ten million Soviet civilians and soldiers, 250,000 people with a disability, 1900 Jehovah’s Witnesses and up to 15,000 gay men.]

I have visited Auschwitz and I have witnessed what was left behind. Auschwitz remains stained with pain and sorrow.

I saw the possessions of those who were murdered are still stored in huge storage sheds. Hair, artificial limbs, suitcases and other personal possessions.

Gas chambers and crematoria furnaces were used with lethal effectiveness against the prisoners. An Auschwitz survivor recalled how healthy mothers and children were sent to the furnaces upon arrival.

“Transports to Auschwitz included between ten and 20 children who were murdered immediately on arrival. If a mother had a child in her arms during the selection, both were sent to the crematorium even if the mother was young and looked healthy. If a grandmother carried her grandchild, she was sent to the gas, while the child’s mother became a camp prisoner.”

Nazis would later use the furnaces to destroy as much evidence as they could of their cowardly and wicked crimes.

This is why it is so important that we acknowledge antisemitism as an ongoing evil that must be combated and defeated.

We must never forget.