OSWIECIM, Poland (AP) ― U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday visited the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz to pay tribute to Holocaust victims.
Ban walked through the infamous “Arbeit Macht Frei” (“Work Makes You Free”) gate to see exhibitions that document the inhumane conditions that the inmates suffered there.
Housed in red brick barracks are the hair and belongings of the inmates, as well as an urn symbolically holding some of the victims’ ashes.
“I stare at the piles of glasses, hair, shoes, prayer shawls and dolls, and try to imagine the individual Jews and others to whom they belonged,” Ban said.
“I stand in disbelief before the gas chambers and crematorium ― and shudder at the cruelty of those who designed this death factory.”
Ban laid flowers at the executions wall, where thousands of inmates, mostly Polish resistance members, were shot.
He then went to nearby Brzezinka village, home of the former Birkenau death camp, with its crematorium ruins and a monument to the victims.
“Auschwitz-Birkenau is not simply a register of atrocities. It is also a repository of courage and hope. Today I say loud and clear: Never again,” Ban said.
He also visited the Chevra Lomdei Mishnayot synagogue, the only remaining building that testifies to the pre-war vibrant Jewish life in the town of Oswiecim.
In its guest book, Ban wrote that he was leaving “saddened but also with huge determination to build this world of equality, human dignity and peace,” according to an image of the entry made available by the Jewish Center in the town.
Between 1940-1945, some 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, died in gas chambers or from starvation, disease and forced labor in Auschwitz and the adjacent Birkenau death camp that Nazi Germany built in occupied Poland.
Ban also visited Krakow, 50 kilometers from the Auschwitz memorial.
On Tuesday he will join a U.N. climate conference in Warsaw.
Boutros Boutros-Ghali was the first U.N. secretary general to visit Auschwitz in 1995.
Ban walked through the infamous “Arbeit Macht Frei” (“Work Makes You Free”) gate to see exhibitions that document the inhumane conditions that the inmates suffered there.
Housed in red brick barracks are the hair and belongings of the inmates, as well as an urn symbolically holding some of the victims’ ashes.
“I stare at the piles of glasses, hair, shoes, prayer shawls and dolls, and try to imagine the individual Jews and others to whom they belonged,” Ban said.
“I stand in disbelief before the gas chambers and crematorium ― and shudder at the cruelty of those who designed this death factory.”
Ban laid flowers at the executions wall, where thousands of inmates, mostly Polish resistance members, were shot.
He then went to nearby Brzezinka village, home of the former Birkenau death camp, with its crematorium ruins and a monument to the victims.
“Auschwitz-Birkenau is not simply a register of atrocities. It is also a repository of courage and hope. Today I say loud and clear: Never again,” Ban said.
He also visited the Chevra Lomdei Mishnayot synagogue, the only remaining building that testifies to the pre-war vibrant Jewish life in the town of Oswiecim.
In its guest book, Ban wrote that he was leaving “saddened but also with huge determination to build this world of equality, human dignity and peace,” according to an image of the entry made available by the Jewish Center in the town.
Between 1940-1945, some 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, died in gas chambers or from starvation, disease and forced labor in Auschwitz and the adjacent Birkenau death camp that Nazi Germany built in occupied Poland.
Ban also visited Krakow, 50 kilometers from the Auschwitz memorial.
On Tuesday he will join a U.N. climate conference in Warsaw.
Boutros Boutros-Ghali was the first U.N. secretary general to visit Auschwitz in 1995.
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Articles by Korea Herald