A one-day conference starting Wednesday will focus on the receding memory of the Holocaust as Sweden marks the 20th anniversary of a conference on remembering the genocide, with participants focusing on how social media is contributing to a rise in anti-Semitism.
“There is a dangerous rise of anti-Semitism all over the world mainly because of the new social media,” said Nachman Shai, the diaspora affairs minister, upon arrival at the International Forum on Holocaust Remembrance in Malmo, southern Sweden.
The media are “inciting and increasing the level of hate, and they have to take responsibility for that not to remain so-called neutral or objective, Shai said.
The German European Affairs Minister Michael Roth said “the situation worldwide” is “extremely worrying,” in reference to recent anti-Jewish attacks in Germany.
The conference is expected to take concrete steps “through a series of pledges to help enhance Holocaust remembrance and education at a time when anti-Semitism, anti-Roma racism and other forms of discrimination are on a worrying rise globally,” the Berlin-based International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance said.
“The mainstreaming of Holocaust distortion, often spread across borders via social media, is a serious challenge for us all globally as it paves the way for anti-Semitism, Holocaust denial and extreme nationalism,” said Kathrin Meyer, the alliance’s secretary general.
The forum comes after the first one was held in Stockholm in 2000. International leaders then urged all countries to open secret government files on the Nazi extermination campaign and promote education about the genocide. The final statement at the end of the three-day event included a pledge to take all necessary steps to open archives to “ensure that all documents bearing on the Holocaust are available to researchers.”
The one-day event, held in Sweden’s third-largest city, was initially planned for October 2020 but because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was postponed for a year.
High-profile protagonists like Presidents Isaac Herzog of Israel and Emmanuel Macron of France, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, will participate remotely. Macron and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken are sending prerecorded video messages.
Only Finland, Latvia, Serbia and North Macedonia are sending presidents and Ukraine, Albania and Estonia their prime ministers. From neighboring Denmark comes Justice Minister Nick Haekkerup and Norway - the other Scandinavian neighbor - is sending an ambassador.