MERKEL VISITS AUSCHWITZ.
BERLIN • Angela Merkel warned of a new wave of anti-semitism across Germany and Europe as she visited Auschwitz to honour the victims of the Holocaust Friday.
Speaking at the concentration camp where 1.1 million people were murdered by the Nazis — the overwhelming majority of them Jewish — Merkel pledged that Germany would never forget its historical responsibility for the Holocaust.
“Remembering the crimes, naming the perpetrators, and giving the victims a dignified commemoration, that is a responsibility that does not end,” she said.
“It is not negotiable, and it is inseparable from our country. Being aware of this responsibility is an integral part of our national identity.”
Merkel used her first official visit to Auschwitz, in Poland, to send a warning about rising anti-semitism.
“These days it is necessary to say this clearly. Because we are experiencing worrying racism, increasing intolerance, a wave of hate crime,” she said. “We pay particular attention to anti-semitism, which threatens Jewish life in Germany, in Europe and beyond.”
Merkel is only the third post-war German chancellor to visit Auschwitz, after Helmut Schmidt and her mentor, Helmut Kohl.
Dressed in black and accompanied by Mateusz Morawiecki, the Polish prime minister, Merkel visited the gas chambers and held a minute’s silence at the Death Wall, where thousands of prisoners were executed.
She spoke movingly of how it felt to stand on the ramp, where Jewish prisoners arriving by train were selected for the gas chambers.
“Being here today and speaking to you as German chancellor is anything but easy for me. I am deeply ashamed of the barbaric crimes perpetrated here by Germans — crimes that transcend the limits of all things,” she said. “In horror at what has been done to women, men and children in this place, you have to be silent ... And yet silence must not be our only answer. This place obliges us to keep the memory alive. We need to remember the crimes that were committed here.”
Merkel was speaking at ceremony to mark the 10th anniversary of the Auschwitz-birkenau Foundation and pledged a donation of $88 million to help preserve it as a memorial and warning to future generations.
The timing of her visit was clearly prompted by the recent rise in anti-semitism in Germany. A bloodbath was narrowly averted in October when a lone far-right gunman failed to gain entry to a synagogue packed with people marking Yom Kippur in Halle. Violent anti-semitic crimes rose by 60 per cent in Germany last year, leaving 43 people injured.