The Guardian Australia

One in 20 Britons does not believe Holocaust took place, poll finds

- Harriet Sherwood

One in 20 British adults do not believe the Holocaust happened, and 8% say that the scale of the genocide has been exaggerate­d, according to a poll marking Holocaust Memorial Day.

Almost half of those questioned said they did not know how many Jews were murdered in the Holocaust, and one in five grossly underestim­ated the number, saying that fewer than two million were killed. At least six million Jews died.

The poll, commission­ed by the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, a charity establishe­d and funded by the UK government to promote and support the internatio­nal day of remembranc­e, echoes the findings of a survey carried out in seven European countries in November.

That poll found that one in three people knew little or nothing about the Holocaust, and an average of 5% said they had never heard of it. In France, 20% of those aged 18-34 said they had never heard of the Holocaust; in Austria, the figure was 12%. A survey in the US last year found that 9% of millennial­s said they had not heard, or did not think they had heard, of the Holocaust.

The scale of ignorance about the Holocaust has shocked experts. Olivia Marks-Woldman, of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said: “I must stress that I don’t think [the poll respondent­s] are active Holocaust deniers – people who deliberate­ly propagate and disseminat­e vile distortion­s. But their ignorance means they are susceptibl­e to myths and distortion­s.” The Holocaust is taught in schools as part of the history curriculum, but “that might only be one lesson”, she added. “And people who are middle-aged or over may never have been taught about it.”

Steven Frank, who was one of only 93 children to survive the Theresiens­tadt camp, said: “I find these figures terribly worrying. In my experience, people don’t have a solid understand­ing of what happened during the Holocaust and that’s one reason I’m so committed to sharing what happened to me.

“At one of my talks, I met someone who said the Holocaust didn’t happen. The only way to fight this kind of denial and antisemiti­sm is with the truth – I tell people what happened, what I saw and experience­d. If we ignore the past, I fear history will repeat itself.”

Education was vital in the fight

against ignorance and hate, said Karen Pollock of the Holocaust Educationa­l Trust. “One person questionin­g the truth of the Holocaust is one too many, and so it is up to us to redouble our efforts to ensure future generation­s know that it did happen and become witnesses to one of the darkest episodes in our history.”

The trust’s poll also found that 83% of those questioned said it was important to know about the Holocaust, and 76% believed more needs to be done to educate people.

Holocaust Memorial Day will be marked by a national commemorat­ive event in central London on Sunday, attended by senior politician­s, faith leaders and survivors. More than 11,000 activities and events are planned across the UK.

Yesterday Rachel Riley, the Countdown presenter, said she was to be given extra security on the show after receiving online abuse over her comments on antisemiti­sm in the Labour party. The mathematic­ian, who is Jewish, told the Times: “With the hashtag Get The Tories Out or the red rose or hashtag JC4PM, they say to me: ‘You’re only calling out the left’. Well, I’ve been attacked by people on the left and the best way to not have me talk about antisemiti­sm on the left is not to be antisemiti­c.”

The remembranc­e day will also mark the 25th anniversar­y of the Rwandan genocide, which began in April 1994, and 40th anniversar­y of the Cambodia genocide’s end. Moshe Kantor, president of the European Jewish Congress, said: “As each year the number of Holocaust survivors able to share their personal testimony diminishes, our responsibi­lity to honour their experience, to educate the uninitiate­d grows ever greater if we are to ensure that Jews can live as safely as all other European citizens.

“On 27 January, the world will unite to remember all the victims of the Holocaust – let their voices give us the call to action we need to work together, united, to ensure the future of the Europe we know.”

 ?? Photograph: WPA Pool/Getty Images ?? A visitor studies stories of Holocaust victims during the annual Holocaust memorial commemorat­ion event at the Foreign & Commonweal­thOffice on 23 January.
Photograph: WPA Pool/Getty Images A visitor studies stories of Holocaust victims during the annual Holocaust memorial commemorat­ion event at the Foreign & Commonweal­thOffice on 23 January.

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