Auschwitz concentration camp memorial service celebrated in Liberation 75 years January 28 8:05

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A total of 75 years have passed since the Auschwitz concentration camp where the Jews were massacred by Nazi Germany during World War II, and people who have survived on the site of the camp and leaders from various countries have participated. The memorial ceremony was held.

In the Auschwitz concentration camp in southern Poland, Nazi Germany killed at least 1.1 million people, mainly Jews, during World War II.

On the 27th, 75 years after the camp was released, a memorial service was held on the site of the camp, and about 200 survived people, including President Steinmeier of Germany and French Prime Minister Philippe. A memorial ceremony was held with representatives from more than one country.

A surviving man speaking at the ceremony pointed out that the idea that the minority could be excluded led to the slaughter, saying, "If the minority was discriminated against, it should not be indifferent. Don't be indifferent if you notice that you are interpreting well. "

Also, wreaths were laid on the spot called the "Death Wall," where a large number of people were shot dead, and survivors mourned the victims.

Genocide = The people who have survived the Holocaust are aging and fewer people are talking about their experiences each year, but crimes related to anti-Semitism have increased in recent years in the persecuted country, Germany. A major issue is how to prevent the tragedy from weathering.