JUSTICE and ACCOUNTABILITY AFTER THE HOLOCAUST

The keynote address by Peter McKenzie QC at the Parliamentary reception for the 2012 UN International Holocaust Memorial Day

In the final stages of the Second World War the allied armies sweeping through eastern Germany and Europe came across sites of such horror and carnage that they found it hard to believe that even the Nazi regime in its worst excesses could have been responsible. Near the town of Gotha they found a death camp where thousands of Jewish prisoners were starved to death and this was reported to General Eisenhower the Allied Supreme Commander. The bodies of naked emaciated men were piled in the rooms and the stench was overpowering. General Patton would not enter fearing he would be physically sick.  Eisenhower however strode in and forced himself to inspect every nook and cranny. He called for photographers and ordered that Germans from the neighbouring villages be brought in and required to bury the dead.  In this way they would have to confront the reality of what the Nazi regime had been doing.  He stated:

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Four People behind the Numbers
The German Unger Story - the fate of a family

Four People behind the Numbers

In February 2011 The Listener published an article about Diana Wichtel’s journey to the death camps her father survived. In that article a reference was made to the International Tracing Service, whom I contacted. 6 months later they provided another tiny piece of evidence of the fate of my family. At a time when the world is tuning in to the trials of the 2nd worst European murders of all time, it is timely to remember the worst genocide, and the faces of some who did not survive.

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The Violinist

The book by Sarah Gaitanos about Clare Galambos Winter, past member of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and Hungarian survivor of Auschwitz, is now available from the Wellington Holocaust Research and Education Centre

$40 plus $4.50 postage, $44.50 (NZ)

 

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Are your origins in Austria?

Inge Woolf  is collecting material  for a Symposium in Vienna on Austrian Jewish migration to New Zealand and the work of the Holocaust Centre. If you would like to contribute your story please fill in this survey

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Holocaust survivors
Holocaust survivors Freda Narev (hidden by a Catholic family in Poland) and Bob Narev (survivor of the Concentration Camp of Theresienstadt) are prepared, by arrangement, to speak of their experiences to secondary schools in the Greater Auckland area. They can be contacted  by email fabnarev@clear.net.nz
 
March of the living

THE MARCH OF THE LIVING is an international, educational programme that brings Jewish teens (16 year olds) from around the world to Poland on Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Memorial Day, to march from Auschwitz to Birkenau, the largest concentration camp complex built during World War II, and then to Israel to observe Yom Hazikaron, Israel Memorial Day, and Yom Ha'atzmaut, Israel Independence Day.

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Anne Frank

The Anne Frank travelling exhibition tells the story of Anne Frank and the Holocaust to people who are not able to visit the Anne Frank Museum in The Netherlands. The exhibition  will tour throughout New Zealand for three years, visiting museums and community centres to teach people the story of Anne Frank and the Holocaust.

Click here for more information.

 
Holocaust research

The Memorial Wall

This section of the website is a place where people in New Zealand can memorialise their loved ones who perished in the Holocaust. If you have someone whom you would like to see remembered, please send us the details together with any documents or photographs you have so that their details can be added.

berger

Marta Löwy nee Berger aged 54 died transport A1 196 Terezin to Lublin 23/4/1942.

briess

Alfred (Fredi) Briess aged 35 died transport EK-457 Terezin to Auschwitz 28/9/1944.

nathans

Lazlo Nathan, Malvin Nathan (nee Grossmann) and their son Paul Nathan. All deported from their home in Bratislava in April 1942. Murdered at Auschwitz 22.8.1942.

siegriedbriess

Siegfried Briess aged 70 died Terezin Concentration Camp 4 /10/1942

goldstajn

Lola and Hersch Goldstajn

Georg__Else_Jottkowitz

George and Else Jottkowitz

jottkowitz_4_generations

Jottkowitz Family - 4 Generations

Myer_and_Isaac_Rifkov_Myer_and_family_killed_near_Mogilev_Ukraine_c_1941

Myer and Isaac Rifkov. They returned to Russia to fight in the revolution. Myer was killed on 12/5/1919. Isaac survived but he and his family were killed near Mogilev, Ukraine around 1941. They were brothers of Sam, Lew and Bob Regan and Jayne Webber who migrated to Wellington after WWII.

 
Survivors, Righteous Gentiles, and Second Generation
An account of the Holocaust has to consider the experience of the Holocaust survivors, the role of those who did their best to resist the perpetrators by helping and saving victims, and the impact of the Holocaust on the children of survivors, the second and even third generation. The link to Holocaust stories at the top of the page describes the impact of the Holocaust on the lives of a number of New Zealanders who are Holocaust survivors, children of Holocaust survivors and those who helped and saved Jews during the Holocaust