Issues in Focus
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Inter Faith »
- The Relationship between the People and God
- Communique of the Anglican Jewish Commission of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel
- A Common Word for the Common Good
- Archbishop's Reflections on the 7th Building Bridges Seminar
- Archbishop Hosts Annual Inter Faith Lecture
- 'Sharia law' - What did the Archbishop actually say?
- Archbishop's Lecture - Civil and Religious Law in England
- Civil and religious law in England lecture - Question and Answer session
- Archbishop's Holocaust Memorial Day Statement
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2007 »
- Archbishop's Speech at the Launch of Inter Faith Consultation
- Why Social Cohesion Needs Religion
- The Archbishop of Canterbury at the Opening Session of the 6th Building Bridges Seminar
- Archbishop on Conflict between Religion and Modernity
- Greetings for Diwali
- Archbishop's response to A Common Word
- Greetings and Prayers for Eid
- Hopes and Prayers at the Start of the Jewish New Year
- Faith Communities in a Civil Society - Christian Perspectives
- Multiculturism: Friend or Foe
- Archbishop to Give Inaugural Zaki Badawi Memorial Lecture
- Holocaust Needs to be Remembered as Real Event »
- Archbishop's Holocaust Memorial Day Statement
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Holocaust Needs to be Remembered as Real Event
Thursday 25 January 2007
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams has said that the Holocaust needs to be remembered as a real, historical and well-documented event. In a statement to mark the UK's Holocaust Memorial day, he said that the day should be marked for future generations.
" We need ... to ensure that, when in future we have no survivors physically amongst us, the evidence that has been so painstakingly collected by organisations such as the Yad Vashem Foundation continues to be available to all who wish to approach and study it with the respect that is due. "
Attempts to challenge the Holocaust as history, such as the recent conference in Iran, brought disgrace on those who sought to do so for political purposes:
" The clear implication was that if it had happened at all, it had been greatly exaggerated from motives to do with Zionism and a European guilt complex. It cannot be acceptable to treat the systematic murder of six million Jews and others as a propaganda issue for a particular cause."
Dr Williams paid tribute to survivors of the Holocaust and to those who sought to ensure that it was meticulously documented and researched. He singled out the work of Sir Elie Wiesel, a survivor of the Holocaust who had worked to ensure that the suffering would be remembered. He warned that challenges still lie ahead and that the Holocaust Memorial Day was not simply about commemorating the past:
" It is a day to recommit in the most practical ways to continue the struggle against the underlying anti-Semitic causes of that event which remain present and virulent within our communities in this country as in others."

