Speeches
by politicians banned at 80th anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation
Director of
the memorial says he wants the focus to be on the last survivors of the Nazi
concentration camp
Shaun Walker
Shaun Walker
in Warsaw
Mon 13 Jan
2025 07.00 GMT
Monarchs,
presidents and prime ministers are expected among the attenders at a
commemoration event for the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz
later this month, but none of them will be let near a microphone.
In a first
for a “round” anniversary of the liberation, the Auschwitz museum has banned
all speeches by politicians at the event on 27 January, which will mark 80
years since the day Soviet troops liberated the camp in 1945. Only Auschwitz
survivors will speak, in what is likely to be the last big commemoration when
many are still alive and healthy enough to travel.
“There will
be no political speeches at all,” said Piotr Cywiński, director of the
Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial and museum, in a recent interview with the
Guardian. “We want to focus on the last survivors that are among us and on
their history, their pain, their trauma and their way to offer us some
difficult moral obligations for the present,” he added.
Contemporary
politics are nonetheless swirling around the buildup to the event, threatening
to overshadow the remembrance ceremony. Earlier this month, Poland’s deputy
foreign minister suggested authorities would be obliged to arrest the Israeli
prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, if he travelled to Poland for the ceremony,
given the international criminal court warrant for his arrest on war crimes
charges.
The prime
minister, Donald Tusk, rowed back on that threat on Thursday, announcing that
any Israeli politician, including Netanyahu, could visit the ceremony without
fear of arrest, despite the fact that Poland is a signatory to the ICC.
“The Polish
government treats the safe participation of the leaders of Israel in the
commemorations on 27 January 2025, as part of paying tribute to the Jewish
nation, millions of whose daughters and sons became victims of the Holocaust
carried out by the Third Reich,” read a resolution released by Tusk’s office.
Cywiński
described the whole discussion as a “media provocation”, claiming there was no
indication that Netanyahu had ever planned to visit the ceremony in the first
place. He said, however, that a sizeable Israeli delegation was expected at the
event.
A protest
near the chancellery of the prime minister of Poland after the Polish
government said it would ensure free and safe participation in the 80th
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz for representatives of Israel,
despite the arrest warrant issued against Benjamin Natanyahu by the ICC.
Photograph: Dawid Żuchowicz/Agencja Wyborcza.pl/Reuters
Israel’s
continuing assault on Gaza is only one of many contemporary events that makes
it more complicated to regard the ceremony as simply a gathering of world
leaders in quiet commemoration of the 1.1 million people who were killed at
Auschwitz, the vast majority of whom were Jewish.
In 2005,
Vladimir Putin visited the 60th anniversary commemoration, giving a speech in
which he said it was “inconceivable to think that people are capable of such
barbarity” and paid tribute to the Soviet soldiers who liberated the camp. This
time, however, no Russian delegation has been invited.
Cywiński
pointed out that both Russians and Ukrainians were among the Red Army troops
who liberated the camp, and that the war in neighbouring Ukraine is therefore
“a war conducted by one liberator against another”. He said there was no
question of any Russian delegation attending in the current climate.
“It’s called
the day of liberation, and I do not think that a country that does not
understand the value of liberty has something to do at a ceremony dedicated to
the liberation. It would be cynical to have them there,” he said.
He dismissed
any parallels between Russia’s acts in Ukraine and Israel’s assault on Gaza. “I
try not to enter into politics with Auschwitz, and I ask politicians to not
enter Auschwitz with politics. But the situation is, of course, absolutely
different,” he said. He described the war in Ukraine as “one country attacking
an innocent and independent country”, and said Israel’s offensive in Gaza,
though “tragic”, was “a country trying to protect themselves from enormous
terrorist attack”.
Cywiński, a
Polish medieval historian by training, has been in charge of the Auschwitz
museum since 2006 and is no stranger to the site being caught up in
contemporary events, steering the museum through eight years of government by
the rightwing Law and Justice party, during which time Holocaust memory was a
frequent political battleground.
Now, he
would rather focus on plans to preserve the museum for future generations.
Located on the edge of the Polish town of Oświęcim, the memorial is housed in
the preserved original buildings of the Auschwitz concentration camp and the
ruins of the neighbouring Birkenau extermination camp.
A visit is a
harrowing affair, with exhibits featuring more than two tonnes of human hair,
piles of suitcases with names written on the side and display cases of everyday
objects from people who arrived at the camp thinking they were starting a new
life and were then murdered in gas chambers. Official guides provide tours in
21 languages.
On a visit
to the site last year, the Guardian saw how technical and preservation experts
are working methodically to ensure the huge and tragic collection of shoes,
suitcases, toothbrushes and many other items are catalogued and preserved as
best as possible.
Work is also
under way to add foundations to a number of brick barracks in Birkenau,
buildings that were erected hastily and were not meant to last. “It’s easier to
preserve a castle, a cathedral or a pyramid than some very weak buildings built
the during the war,” said Cywiński.
The goal is
to ensure that the museum will endure as one of the most striking reminders of
humankind’s capacity to carry out horrific deeds, a warning that Cywiński feels
is more pressing than ever.
“Never
before in the postwar period has remembrance been as important as it is now … I
think we are at an enormous turning point. Everything’s changed very, very
quickly. And those changes are touching very, very deeply some of the most
important factors of our civilisation. That’s why I think in these times we
need some very tangible points of reference,” he said. Auschwitz should be one
of those points, he believes.
Last year,
Elon Musk toured the site, after intense criticism over how his X network
handles antisemitic posts. Since the visit, however, Musk has only intensified
his spread of misinformation on X. Last Thursday, during a live discussion with
Musk on the platform, Alice Weidel of Germany’s far-right AfD claimed Adolf
Hitler was not rightwing at all but in fact a communist.
While
Cywiński declined to discuss Musk specifically, he said that populist politics
and hate speech on social media pose a huge threat to contemporary societies.
“This is the most important issue of our time … Every wise and hard and
difficult proposal expressed by a philosopher or by old-school politicians,
will probably lose with the public at large with any stupid, simple populist
idea,” he said.
After
spending nearly two decades living and working on the site of the
20th-century’s worst crime, it is a situation he feels is exceptionally
dangerous.
“You have to
remember that between the arrival of Adolf Hitler to power and the start of the
second world war, it was just six years. Six years of propaganda. And he didn’t
have social media, he didn’t have the internet,” he said.
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