The Presiding Archbishop and General Overseer of the Christian Action Faith Ministries, Archbishop, Nicholas Duncan Williams, has charged the international community and all humanity to ensure that, the atrocities committed against the Jews during the Second World War by the German Nazis (HOLOCAUST) is not repeated.
Speaking at this year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day, Archbishop Duncan Williams bemoaned the act and emphasized that as the world marks the International Holocaust Remembrance Day, it should be a beacon call on all humanity to ensure that “good people do not sit and do nothing as evil triumphs over good … it is important that in our life time, such atrocities do not happen again.”
The Embassy of Israel on Monday marked the International Holocaust Memorial Day under the theme ‘Who Will Carry the Memory on?’
The Ambassador of the State of Israel to Ghana, Ami Mehl, who is also the son of a Holocaust survivor, described the challenges of preserving the memory of Holocaust.
“It was difficult to grow up in a family where you know something happened, it was difficult to live with the silence…, you do not forget or forgive, you just continue to live because there is no other way,” he said.
Ambassador Mehl used the occasion to call on all human beings to fight against racism and hatred for one another.
In her remarks, UN Resident Coordinator in Ghana Christine Evans-Clock called on all to “confront the normalization of hatred and the issue of treating someone as the other because of their differences”.
German Ambassador Christoph Retzlaff also stressed on the need to expose all forms of prejudices.
He emphasized that racist ideologies cannot be justified under any circumstance and called for respect for all humanity.
This year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration brought together members of the diplomatic Community, government officials, some notable religious leaders, and friends from the media.
The event started with a Christian prayer by Rev. Sam Korankye Ankrah, the Apostle General of the Royalhouse Chapel International, and ended with a Jewish prayer by Rabbi Noach Majesky with a call on all humanity to embrace peace.
Other activities to mark the day included a lightning of candles in memory the victims of Holocaust and a screen viewing of the testimony of one of the brave women who gave birth at a Concentration Camp.
The United Nations General Assembly through a Resolution in 2005 designated January 27 of every year as International Holocaust Remembrance Day to be observed by member states in memory of victims of the Holocaust.
Approximately 6 million Jews were murdered by the Nazis between 1939 and 1945, alongside a myriad of other groups they considered undesirable or dangerous, including the mentally and physically handicapped, the deaf, homosexuals, Roma or Gypsies, political dissidents or intellectuals, and many more.
This year’s commemoration marks the 73rd anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz on site at the former Nazi death camp in Oswiecim, southern Poland.
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