Holocaust Day marked at Nazi death camp Auschwitz
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                  Holocaust Day marked at Nazi death camp Auschwitz

                  Photo by bbc.news

                  Holocaust Day marked at Nazi death camp Auschwitz

                  27.01.2010, Holocaust

                  Events are taking place at Auschwitz to commemorate the 65th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camp, as the world marks Holocaust Memorial Day.

                  Auschwitz survivors and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are among those gathering in Poland, where the camp was built under German occupation. In Berlin, Israeli President Shimon Peres urged Germany and other countries to pursue Holocaust perpetrators.
                  More than a million people were murdered by the Nazis at Auschwitz. The great majority were Jews but they also included non-Jewish Poles, Roma Gypsies and Soviet prisoners of war.The camp was liberated by the Soviet Red Army on 27 January 1945.

                  Addressing Germany's parliament, Israel's president Shimon Peres said some of those who carried out the Holocaust "still live on German and European soil, and in other parts of the world".

                  "My request of you is: Please do everything to bring them to justice."

                  Some of those who survived the Holocaust gathered at the site of the Auschwitz and neighbouring Birkenau death camps on Wednesday, despite the cold and the snow. Many had relatives with them. They passed beneath the notorious sign above the entrance, reading "Arbeit Macht Frei", or "Work Makes You Free". The sign is a replica. The original was stolen last month. It has been recovered, in three pieces, but not yet repaired and repositioned.

                  BBC News