Close X
Saturday, May 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2025 12:52 PM
  • Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later

As she prepared to return to Auschwitz-Birkenau, Miriam Ziegler vividly recalled how it felt to be a little girl orphaned by the Nazis and left alone in a world ruined by war.

Eighty years after the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp, the 89-year-old Ziegler said Monday the rising tide of "hatred" around the world makes her fear that history might be ready to repeat itself.

"I'm afraid that it can happen again. For my children, for my grandchildren," she said. "I was lucky enough to survive."

Ziegler and fellow Canadian Auschwitz survivor Howard Chandler, 96, met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Krakow, Poland on Monday. They and Trudeau were in the country for events marking the anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation.

Ziegler was placed in an orphanage after the camp was freed and eventually moved to Canada.

She said that while it's hard to return to those dark memories, she believes God spared her life so that she could tell the world what she witnessed.

"I have to keep telling the story. It shouldn't happen again. It shouldn't happen, doesn't matter — any nation," she said.

More than six million Jews — including Ziegler's family — were killed in the Holocaust as the Nazi regime sought to wipe out Europe's Jewish population during the Second World War. Historians estimate more than one million people, mostly Jews, were killed in the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp.

Chandler recalled the day he watched German soldiers come to his village and force Jewish men to shave off their beards in public.

"The Catholic people, our neighbours, were standing on the sidewalk laughing. There was one family that lived across from us ... she says, 'Don't be so joyful with what they're doing to the Jews. They're going to start with the Jews, they're going to finish with us,'" Chandler said. "Very smart woman."

"If you don't nip it in the bud when this happens, it is going to spread as we see now," he added. "(Antisemitism) is a curse."

Chandler, his brother and their father were sent to a slave labour camp in Wierzbnik, Poland. They lived and worked there for two years before being transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Chandler survived death marches to Germany before being reunited with his brother in the Buchenwald concentration camp, near Weimer, Germany.

Both were freed in Terezin, Czech Republic after the war ended.

Like Ziegler, Chandler said he believes he has a duty to tell the world what he experienced — and to deliver a warning.

"Auschwitz didn't come down from the sky. It started with words, and it ends with a chimney, being burned and going out in smoke," he said.

"Nobody, except the Holocaust survivors who experienced this, can feel what is coming. It's not only our duty, but the duty of humanity to make sure it doesn't happen to anybody."

The federal government announced Monday it will provide just under $3.4 million in new funding for initiatives to combat antisemitism and provide education about the Holocaust.

Most of the money, $1.3 million, will go to the United Nations’ international program on Holocaust and genocide education.

The rest is being divided among the Montreal Holocaust Museum, the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre, Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, the Toronto Holocaust Museum, the Canadian Society for Yad Vashem, and the Jewish Federation of Victoria and Vancouver Island.

The government made the announcement as a gathering to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau began Monday.

Politicians and heads of state were not scheduled to speak at the somber ceremony. Instead, they sat in the audience and listened to survivors tell their stories.

About 50 survivors — the youngest at least 80 years old — were expected to attend. Roughly 200 attended the 75thanniversary event in 2020.

Trudeau said he felt "blessed" to meet with Ziegler and Chandler and hear their stories.

"It's a time in the world where we need to be reminded what 'never again' means, more than ever before," Trudeau said at the start of their meeting.

Before Monday's ceremony, Trudeau visited House 88, the former home of Auschwitz Commandant Rudolph Höss.

The windows of the house — including one in the room where Höss' children slept — look onto the grounds of the death camp.

The house was purchased recently by the Counter Extremism Project and turned into the Auschwitz Research Center on Hate, Extremism, and Radicalization.

Following the tour, Trudeau met with Polish President Andrzej Duda. Both remarked on how this is likely to be the final major gathering of Auschwitz survivors.

This may be Trudeau's last major international trip as prime minister. The next Liberal party leader is being chosen on March 9.

Trudeau is scheduled to meet with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Tuesday before returning to Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web
A Quebec man has been sentenced to 30 years in United States federal prison for his role in an international drug ring that imported millions of fake Xanax pills into that country. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says Arden McCann, 37, has been sentenced by a judge in Georgia for being "one of the largest drug vendors" on the dark web — a hidden part of the internet accessible through specialized software.

Quebec man sentenced to 30 years in U.S. prison for selling fake Xanax on dark web

Former chief trade negotiator says Alberta undermining Canada in U.S. tariff talks

Former chief trade negotiator says Alberta undermining Canada in U.S. tariff talks
Ottawa's former chief trade negotiator Steve Verheul says Alberta is undermining Canada's attempts to prevent the U.S. from levying damaging tariffs. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has rallied most of the premiers to agree that all sectors of the Canadian economy could be deployed to fight back against U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all imports from Canada.

Former chief trade negotiator says Alberta undermining Canada in U.S. tariff talks

42-year-old woman killed, son arrested in Montreal's first homicide of the year

42-year-old woman killed, son arrested in Montreal's first homicide of the year
A 42-year-old woman is dead and her 21-year-old son has been arrested in what Montreal police say is the city's first murder of the year. Police spokesperson Mariane Allaire Morin says a 911 call came in Thursday morning for a welfare check at a home in the LaSalle borough, west of downtown Montreal. 

42-year-old woman killed, son arrested in Montreal's first homicide of the year

Freeland says Liberal leadership candidates should pledge to run as MPs

Freeland says Liberal leadership candidates should pledge to run as MPs
Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland called Friday for four Liberal leadership debates Friday and said the other leadership candidates should commit to running in the next election under the party banner — no matter who wins. In an open letter to the other candidates, Freeland said that the four debates, two in each official language, should be held as soon as possible.

Freeland says Liberal leadership candidates should pledge to run as MPs

Federal government using AI to tackle Phoenix backlog as it tests replacement system

Federal government using AI to tackle Phoenix backlog as it tests replacement system
The federal government is expanding its use of artificial intelligence to clear a backlog of Phoenix pay system transactions as it transitions to a new platform. Alex Benay, associate deputy minister at Public Services and Procurement Canada, says his team will be able to share a recommendation with the government on whether it should adopt the Dayforce system as its new human resources and payroll platform by the end of March. 

Federal government using AI to tackle Phoenix backlog as it tests replacement system

Edmonton school board, union for support staff head back to bargaining table

Edmonton school board, union for support staff head back to bargaining table
The union representing school support workers in Edmonton says it has returned to the bargaining table with the city's public school board. Some 3,000 staff, from educational assistants to cafeteria workers, have been on picket lines since Jan. 13 over a wage dispute with the Edmonton Public School Board.

Edmonton school board, union for support staff head back to bargaining table