Cape Town Youth Remember Jewish Holocaust

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cape town youth remember jewish holocaust

Some of the youth attending the holocaust commemoration in Cape Town say they are remembering the incident in order to prevent it from ever happening again in the future.

Members of the Jewish community gathered in Pinelands for the annual Holocaust Day or Yom Hashoah.

Every year, Jewish communities around the world pay tribute to the memory of six million men, women and children who were killed during the Holocaust. Cape Town is home to a number of the holocaust survivers such as 102-year-old Edo Blumenthal. This is what some of the learners had to say.

You must remember the bad things that have happened and you must not let it out of your mind because if you do then they might happen again. So, its just very good to know our roots to remember to be proud of being Jewish especially now with the war in Israel. I learnt that we must stay together as one and must never forget. Honour the memory and never forget its important. Because its our history so its important for us to be here. Remembrance prevents re-occurrence. Just always remember we are the future.

Executive Director for the Cape South Africa Jewish Board of Deputies Daniel Bloch says the Remembrance Day also helps to conscientize young people about their roots so they can know

Cape Town has a number of survivors including Edo Blumenthal who is 102. Shes here today, shes lifted the last memorial candle and I think the significance we have the sayings, We remember never again and its important to teach our youth and to teach everyone that atrocities like the holocaust over six million people can never be forgotten and we need to learn from the mistakes of the past.

A lifting of memorial candle flame and wreath laying ceremony on the memorial monument was also observed.

The day also marks the anniversary of the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising by Jewish resistance movement in Poland, during World War 2.