Milton Keynes Rose to host virtual event for Holocaust Memorial Day 2021

    This year's Holocaust Memorial event at the Milton Keynes Rose will not be able to go ahead, but organisers have decided to put together a virtual service.

    Holocaust Memorial Day 2021 is Wednesday 27 January, the day for everyone to remember the millions of people murdered in the Holocaust under Nazi persecution and in subsequent genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Dafur. On this day we would normally be gathered at The Milton Keynes Rose to honour survivors of these regimes and challenge ourselves to use the lessons of their experiences to inform our lives today.

    This year it will not be possible to hold a Holocaust Memorial event at the Milton Keynes Rose in Campbell Park, as usual, because of Covid-19 restrictions, but a short talk by Paul Salver, formerly a teacher at Sir Herbert Leon Academy, some words from the Mayor of MK Cllr Andrew Geary and a poem for the occasion by Mark Niel, will be posted on the website www.miltonkeynesrose.org.uk to mark the date.

    2021’s theme ‘Be the Light in the Darkness’, is a quotation from Holocaust survivor, Gena Turgel a great friend of Milton Keynes where she visited the Sir Herbert Leon Academy several times to talk about her experiences in Nazi concentration camps. In her memoirs, Gena says: “We will continue to do our bit for as long as we can, secure in the knowledge that others will continue to light a candle long after us.”

    Gena’s sentiments are replicated in a new publication about the Holocaust from Living Archive MK: Echoes and Reflections: Remembering the Holocaust in Milton Keynes, a collection of memories and insights from contributors who have worked or lived in MK during the last 50 years.  The editor of the collection Marion Hill DL says: “For me, these contributors represent the candles depicted on the cover of the book, as our 'light in the darkness'. It is a powerful statement to the modern world that not only must we not forget; we must do more - to prevent any genocide.”

    Mayor of Milton Keynes, Councillor Andrew Geary, added: “The Holocaust is a deeply uncomfortable but very significant part of our history. But these uncomfortable and deeply moving parts of history must never, ever be erased from our minds or memories. For it is as we remember the past that we also shape the future.”

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