The international Auschwitz committee said on Tuesday it was "horrified" after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's remarks on a "single-mixed Hungarian race", calling on the European Union to "distance itself from such racist overtones".

The speech of the nationalist leader, “stupid and dangerous”, reminds survivors of the Holocaust “of the dark times of their own exclusion and persecution”, reacted Christoph Heubner, vice-president of the organization, in a statement.

Visiting Vienna

He called on Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer, who is hosting Viktor Orban on an official visit to Vienna on Thursday, to stand out on behalf of the EU.

We must “make the world understand that Mr. Orban has no future in Europe”, whose values ​​he “knowingly denies”.

In a speech on Saturday in Romanian Transylvania, where a large Hungarian community resides, the nationalist leader, known for his anti-migrant policy, had virulently reaffirmed his rejection of a “multi-ethnic” society.

"We don't want to be a mixed race", which would mix with "non-Europeans", he had said.

Words not new

The countries “where European and extra-European peoples live together are no longer nations.

These countries are nothing more than conglomerates of peoples”, also launched Viktor Orban who had made similar comments in the past but without using the term “race”, according to experts.

The government defended itself on Tuesday, through its spokesperson Zoltan Kovacs, against "a misinterpretation" of the remarks by "people who clearly do not understand the difference between the mixture of different ethnic groups in the Judeo- Christianity, and the mixture of peoples of different civilizations.

An allusion to the gas chambers

Orban also alluded to the gas chambers of the Nazi regime, castigating Brussels' plan to reduce European gas demand by 15%.

“I don't see how they can force the Member States to do so, although there is German know-how in this area, as the past has shown,” he quipped.

The Hungarian Jewish community also rose up against this discourse.

“Many different species inhabit our planet.

On two legs, working, talking and sometimes thinking, only one species lives on this earth: Homo Sapiens Sapiens.

This race is one and indivisible,” Chief Rabbi Robert Frölich wrote on Facebook.

In the political class, Romanian Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu deemed such “ideas” “unacceptable”.

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