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Yad Vashem Welcomes the Unanimous Decision of the United Nations General Assemby to Adopt the Resolution on Holocaust Denial and Distortion a Week before International Holocaust Remembrance Day

"The international community has a responsibility to proactively combat the scourge of Holocaust denial & distortion" Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan

20 January 2022

Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center, welcomes the adoption today by the General Assembly of the United Nations, unanimously, of the resolution which rejects and condemns any denial or distortion of the Holocaust.

Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan states:

"As the international community focuses their attention on the events of the Holocaust, with the approach of International Holocaust Remembrance Day (January 27), we must redouble our efforts to expand and support unfettered and fact-based Holocaust research and education. Holocaust distortion is so dangerous because, quite plainly, it misrepresents essential facts of history in order to legitimize past and present misdeeds. The Holocaust carries substantial relevance for many vital contemporary issues, denying and distorting the uniqueness and unprecedented aspects of events is not only detrimental to the memory of the Holocaust but to that of other atrocities and genocides as well." 

The resolution is an important expression of the substantial responsibility that the international community has taken on to proactively combat the scourge of Holocaust denial and distortion.

The resolution underscores that, in addition to fighting the generally recognized and denigrated phenomenon of explicit denial of the Shoah, nations and individuals worldwide must also discern and combat more nuanced and complex, but no less dangerous, forms of implicit Holocaust denial and distortion. These include:

  • Minimizing local collaboration with the German Nazi ' persecution and murder of the Jews before and during World War II, and exaggerating the degree of local non-Jewish sympathy and assistance to the endangered Jews, including claims of collective national righteousness.
  • Denying frequent local enthusiasm in welcoming the takeover by Nazi Germany of other territories and regions, including sympathy for the virulent racist antisemitic policies of Nazism.
  • Unsubstantiated, false claims of supposed "multiple genocide" programs (against non-Germans other than Jews) by the Nazis. There were in fact no such programs, and certainly none were implemented.
  • Employing Holocaust-related terminology and imagery within contemporary controversies and issues which are objectively not related whatsoever to the Holocaust (for instance, the COVID-19 pandemic)

The General Assembly's adoption of this Resolution emphasizes that Holocaust denial and distortion are not only "Jewish issues", but profoundly human ones, which must concern nations and individuals around the world and motivate them to effective action.

Yad Vashem's matchless resources and expertise in documenting, researching and teaching about the Holocaust are valuable tools in this context and are available globally. Yad Vashem looks forward to widening and enhancing its already extensive cooperation with scores of nations, agencies and institutions worldwide in this crucial effort.

Please visit Yad Vashem's website for more information about the Holocaust, commemorative activities for International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and more online exhibitions.