Local MP signs Holocaust Educational Trust Book of Commitment.

Today (27 January) is Holocaust Memorial Day and Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, Andrew Jones, has signed the Holocaust Educational Trust’s Book of Commitment. By doing so Andrew pledged his commitment to honouring those who were murdered during the Holocaust as well as paying tribute to the extraordinary Holocaust survivors who work tirelessly to educate young people today.

Holocaust Memorial Day falls on 27 January every year which is the anniversary of the liberation of the infamous former Nazi concentration and death camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau, in 1945. Across the UK – and world – people will come together to remember the horrors of the past.

In the lead up to and on Holocaust Memorial Day thousands of commemorative events have been arranged by schools, faith groups and community organisations across the country remembering all the victims of the Holocaust and subsequent genocides. The theme for this year’s commemorations is ‘Ordinary People’.

Holocaust Memorial Day also remembers and pays tribute to all of those persecuted by the Nazis including Roma and Sinti people, disabled people, gay men, political opponents to the Nazis and others. We also remember all of those affected by genocide sinc, in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

After signing the Book of Commitment Andrew commented:

“As the number of Holocaust survivors diminishes it makes these memorial events both more poignant and more important.”

“It is important that we don’t just remember but we also learn for the future too”.

You can watch Andrew’s video for Holocaust Memorial Day here.

Karen Pollock CBE, Chief Executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said:

“On Holocaust Memorial Day we remember the 6 million men, women and children who were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators, simply for being Jewish, and we pay tribute to the incredible survivors, many of whom still share their testimony day in and day out to ensure that future generations never forget the horrors of the past. We also remember that antisemitism did not start or end with the Holocaust, we must all be vigilant, and speak out whenever it is found.”