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‘Never forget road to Holocaust began in a democracy’ – Home Secretary

Yvette Cooper spoke at a ceremony for Yom HaShoah, an annual day for the Jewish community to reflect on the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis.

By contributor Rosie Shead, PA
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Home Secretary Yvette Cooper delivers the official Government address at the 80th Anniversary National Yom HaShoah Commemoration, in Victoria Tower Gardens,
Yvette Cooper spoke at the Yom HaShoah ceremony outside Parliament in central London (James Manning/PA)

The Home Secretary has vowed to “never forget that the road to the Holocaust began in a democracy”, as she commemorated the 80th anniversary of the end of the atrocity.

Yvette Cooper spoke at a ceremony for Yom HaShoah, an annual day for the Jewish community to reflect on the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis, on Wednesday evening outside Parliament in Victoria Tower Gardens.

The site is the planned location of the new UK Holocaust Memorial and Learning Centre.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks to Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis at the 80th Anniversary National Yom HaShoah Commemoration, in Victoria Tower Gardens, beside the Houses of Parliament, central London
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks to Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis at the 80th Anniversary National Yom HaShoah Commemoration (James Manning/PA)

Addressing attendees, the Home Secretary said: “More than three quarters of a century on, we know antisemitism has remained stubbornly present in our own society, and the torrent of antisemitism that swept through countries, including here in the UK, following the October 7th barbaric terrorist attacks, was sickening and intolerable.

“And I want to say to Britain’s Jewish communities, on behalf of the Government and of Members of Parliament from across all political parties, we will not stand for it, not now, not ever.

“Antisemitism has no place in our nation.”

Of the memorial, she said: “It’s so important too, that it’s here in the shadow of Parliament, in the heart of our democracy, because we must never forget that the road to the Holocaust began in a democracy, and that memorial must be the constant reminder of what happens when our democratic values and traditions fail, and also to show us how democracies remember and learn from the past because to build a better future means, when never again means never again, we must continue to listen to the survivors’ stories, which, with every passing year become so much more precious.”

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks to Bergen-Belsen survivor Susan Pollack at the 80th Anniversary National Yom HaShoah Commemoration, in Victoria Tower Gardens,
Yvette Cooper met Bergen-Belsen survivor Susan Pollack (right) at the event on Wednesday (James Manning/PA)

It comes as the Prime Minister vowed to “fight the poison of antisemitism” and “protect” the Jewish community in an article for the Jewish Chronicle, published on Wednesday.

Sir Keir Starmer wrote: “Together, we will fight the poison of antisemitism wherever it is found.

“We renew our demand that the 59 hostages still held by Hamas are freed and we must also see a return to the ceasefire.

“And here in Britain, just as I made it my mission to root out the stain of antisemitism from my political party, so I will do the same for the country.

“We will protect our Jewish community, including Jewish students on our university campuses.

“We will never accept people being abused, attacked, or threatened because of who they are or what they believe.

“And we will back the police wherever antisemitic hate crimes are committed – whether in person or online.”

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