To mark the International Holocaust Remembrance Day, emphasise its universal significance and oppose its distortion, the NEVER AGAIN Association, together with its civil society partners and members in Southeast Asia, has co-organised a special online session on 27th January 2021. It brought together Jews, Buddhists, Muslims and Christians, intellectuals, faith leaders, human rights activists, educators and students from different countries and continents, with a special focus on the Southeast Asian region.
The online round table featured Jeremy Jones,
the Director of Community and of International Affairs of the Australia/Israel
& Jewish Affairs Council (Australia); Venerable Lablu Barua, Wat
Phrmarangsi Buddhist Monastery in Bangkok (Thailand); Sayana Ser, the
translator of ‘The Diary of Anne Frank’ in Khmer language, Peace Institute
(Cambodia); Nickey Diamond, a scholar and human rights specialist at Fortify
Rights (Myanmar); and Prof. Rafal Pankowski of the ‘NEVER AGAIN’ Association
(Poland). It was moderated by a member of ‘NEVER AGAIN’, Natalia Sineaeva, a
Holocaust scholar and Rotary Peace Fellow alumna (Chulalongkorn University
Bangkok 2018) and Dr Sanjoy Barua Chowdhury of the International Buddhist
College (IBC) in Thailand.
The participants came from Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Germany, India, Israel, Malaysia, Myanmar, Norway, Poland, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, UK, USA, and Vietnam. They discussed the legacy of the Holocaust, challenges for its commemoration and the possible meaning of its commemoration in the region of Southeast Asia in relation to the region’s history and experiences of genocide and mass atrocities.
The United Nations General Assembly designated the International Holocaust Remembrance Day or International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust in 2005. The 27th of January marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi German concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland in 1945.
Natalia Sineaeva noted in her introductory
remarks: - ‘Jews and Roma were mainly targeted for genocide by Nazi Germany
during the Second World War, but its significance is universal. Today, when
very few Holocaust survivors are left, we need to preserve this memory, and not
let it be trivialised, banalised, or even worse, distorted and denied. How can
we use and apply the universal lessons of the Holocaust which happened in
Europe in a non-European context, where the experiences of the Second World War
were different, for example in Southeast Asia? There is often a lack of
knowledge of Holocaust history, but there are local histories of conflicts and
instances of genocide, and various forms of genocide distortion exist, too.’
The online round table was the first in the series of further events to be organised for the project ‘Identifying and Countering Holocaust Distortion. Lessons for Southeast Asia’ implemented by the ‘NEVER AGAIN’ Association together with its partners in the countries of Southeast Asia. The project deals with various forms of Holocaust distortion and denial spread in the region of Southeast Asia, e.g., the usage of Nazi imagery, normalisation of the image of Hitler and Nazi Germany in popular culture; conspiracy theories scapegoating minorities and blaming the victims (including the Jews) for past crimes and historical conflicts; the dangerous globalisation of genocide denial, including the rise of ‘multi-deniers’ who distort both the Nazi crimes and other cases of genocide, such as the crimes of the Khmer Rouge or anti-Rohingya violence. Importantly, the project draws on the regional experiences of the Second World War and further instances of genocide in Cambodia, Myanmar, and Thailand to inspire critical memory discourses and develop capacities to counter Holocaust and genocide distortion in the region. It has been supported by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA).
The ‘NEVER AGAIN’ Association is an independent anti-racist organization founded in Warsaw in 1996. It has campaigned against antisemitism, racism and xenophobia, for peace, intercultural dialogue and human rights both in Poland and internationally.
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