The extermination of European Jews by the Nazi regime should not be forgotten
and should remain an everlasting memento, Czech President Vaclav Klaus said
today at a meeting in the Czech Senate commemorating Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Today it may be more necessary to recall the crimes against humanity
committed against the Jewish population than decades ago because of the efforts
to re-write the past and use its false picture for political purposes, Klaus
said.
"We do not do this only for historical piety, but also for our future. We do
this to prevent similar monstrous crimes against humanity from ever repeating,"
he said.
"The genocide of European Jews must not be forgotten and must remain an
everlasting memento. This memento will remind us of the evil that people are
capable to commit against each other. It should be a memento that will
strengthen our belief in the fundamental importance of human freedom because it
is the only guarantee that similar tragic events will never repeat," Klaus said.
The Holocaust, an international word that is not quite understandable in the
Czech language, is used by Czechs to describe "may be the most awful and
shameful crime in human history," Klaus said.
"However, I fear whether this one foreign word could complicate our possibility
to sufficiently realise and feel the whole depth of monstrosity of what had
happened then, the monstrosity of the extermination of European Jews by the
German Nazi regime," Klaus said.
The modern time and its problems make the historical experience from the
Holocaust distant for new generations, he said.
"We have experience with the efforts to re-write the past, replace the
committers and victims, compare their sufferings and politically abuse a false
picture of the past thus created," Klaus said.
"That is why it is necessary to point to the importance to commemorate the
Holocaust victims today, may be even more than in the past," Klaus said.
He appreciated that not only Jewish organisations commemorate the Holocaust
victims.
Klaus pointed to the significance of the passing of a law by the Czech
parliament five years ago that made Holocaust Remembrance Day a memorial day in
the Czech Republic.
This day became an opportunity for all to remember the common lesson from the
tragedy of the Nazi "Final Solution of the Jewish Question," Klaus said.
Holocaust Remembrance Day, honoring the six million Jews who died in the
Holocaust in the World War Two, is celebrated on January 27, the day of the
liberation of the Oswiecim (Auschwitz) Nazi extermination camp.
In the Czech Republic, like in most European Union member states, it has been
marked since 2004.
"The day reminds us that evil should be destructed on the start and that the
roots of extremism do not lie in any concrete ideology, concrete religion or
concrete national community," Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek (senior
governing Civic Democrats, ODS) today said in a statement CTK received.
The special session in the Senate today was attended by Senate chairman
Premysl Sobotka (ODS), Chamber of Deputies chairman Miloslav Vlcek (senior
opposition Social Democrats, CSSD) and other guests.
Sobotka said that it was necessary to constantly mobilise all decent people for
the opposition against evil and warned against the "underestimation of new dark
risks."
Karel Holomek, chairman of the Association of Moravian Romanies, said that
the fates of Jews and Romanies were similar during the Holocaust.
"This shows that the monstrosity of racist theories and their implementation
should never be forgotten," he said.