Jerusalem, Israel - Jan. 26, 2017 - In 2005, the United Nations established January 27, the day of liberation of Auschwitz, as a day of commemoration. 

Yad Vashem hosted a special event marking the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust for members of the diplomatic corps in Israel, on Thursday evening. International ambassadors and representatives from over 40 countries attended including, Ambassador of European Union Lars Faaborg-Andersen. France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Poland, Spain, Uruguay, Albania, the United States and Russia were represented.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the audience assembled In the Yad Vashem Synagogue. His remarks stressed that Jewish persecution began with intolerance, and today it comes from the East, from Iran. "Never forget the victims," Netanyahu concluded, we should never need more institutions like this."

The synagogue is lined with artifacts from desecrated and destroyed, synagogues. Synagogues from which Jews were deported. Items are from Romania, Poland and Germany, with a Torah Mantle from Greece, over a sefer Torah from Transnistria, brought to Czernowitz. A stain glassed window was from a synagogue in Dobris, Czechoslovakia. Each item has a story.

Survivors have many stories. One story retold to BJL was of a sefer Torah secreted out of Warsaw and hidden in an old age home. After the war, destruction was all around, except for the small area near the roof of the building where the Torah was stored during the war years. That sefer Torah was brought to Israel and is now in the Heichel Shlomo museum.

After the formal remarks in the synagogue, guests were given a guided tour of "Stars Without a Heaven," an exhibition about children in the Holocaust currently on display at Yad Vashem's Exhibition Pavilion. Of the many stories of child survivors, one featured was of Alfred Lessin and his teddy bear. The bear is not alone, but surrounded by other dolls and toys collected from survivors, some known and some names lost. Every victim has a story.  They wanted so much to live.

"The memory is the only paradise that man cannot be expelled from," a visit to Yad Vashem is always a memorable occasion.

The event will conclude with a lecture by Dr. Haim Gertner, Director of the Yad Vashem Archives Division and Fred Hillman Chair for Holocaust Documentation, entitled "Visible Voices: Holocaust Testimonies and the Challenges of Meaningful Remembrance."