US/World News

Tens of thousands participate in March of the Living

(JTA) — Tens of thousands took part Sunday, April 17 in the “March of the Living,” as well as Hungary’s largest anti-racist rally of the year. March of the Living, now in its 14th year, is held annually to commemorate the deportation of Hungarian Jewry to the Auschwitz concentration camp. The ghettoization of the Hungarian Jews started on April 17, 1944. Some 437,000 Jews from the countryside were sent to Auschwitz and the majority of them were gassed in the neighboring death camp of Birkenau. Only a few thousand survived Auschwitz. In total, 600,000 Hungarian Jews were exterminated in different concentration camps during the Holocaust.

This year’s march started from the downtown Dohány Street Synagogue and ended at the downtown Basilica, the largest Catholic Church in Budapest. For the first time, three Christian bishops took part together in the March of the Living and gave speeches on the same stage. The rally started with a moment of silence in memory of Imre Kertész, the Hungarian Jewish writer who died earlier this month at the age of 87, and whose Holocaust novels won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2002.

The largest applause was for Hungarian Chief Rabbi Robert Frolich, who in his speech was openly critical of the Christian churches saying: “What if the doors of the Basilica had been left open then, during the Holocaust? … But the doors were not open, the Basilica was closed when it needed to be open.” Dr. Janos Szekely, a Roman Catholic bishop, said: “We are here now at the March of the Living in Budapest to express our pain and repentance over the killing of more than half a million Hungarian Jewish compatriots.”

Numerous diplomats attended the rally, including the Israeli Ambassador to Hungary, Ilan Mor. The star of the Oscar Award-winning Hungarian film “Son of Saul,” Géza Röhrig, also appeared at the event.

Other events on Sunday included the dedication of a memorial statue to the forced laborers during World War II in the 8th district of Budapest, which had a large Jewish population before the Holocaust. The monument was created by Hungarian-born Israeli artist Dan Reisinger. The statue was supported by the Hungarian government and the Hungarian Ministry of Defense.

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