In Europe, the crimes of the Nazis are increasingly being instrumentalised by actors from different political camps for their own political agendas, further normalising the trivialisation and denial of the Holocaust in society.
This is happening against the backdrop of very different social contexts: During the conspiracy-driven protests against the measures to contain the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, which extended far into the centre of society, anti-vaccination activists symbolically staged themselves as the 'persecuted of the present' by wearing yellow armbands, and portrayed the German government as the new Nazi dictatorship. Overall, in the first year of the pandemic, over 60% of the antisemitic incidents related to COVID-19 exhibited forms of post-Holocaust antisemitism, as analyses of the RIAS reporting offices show.
Since the massacres of 7 October 2023, against the backdrop of the war between Israel and Hamas, Israeli actions have repeatedly been equated with those of the Nazis. A third of the almost 2,800 antisemitic incidents between 7 October and 31 December 2023 contained such comparisons.
The increase in Holocaust denial and distortion is not a German phenomenon but can be observed internationally.
- What exactly is the situation in Austria, Germany, Italy, Poland and the Czech Republic and what similarities and differences can be observed?
- How do these forms of antisemitism manifest in the context of current events, and from whom do they originate?
- How do the denial and distortion of the Holocaust affect survivors and their descendants?
- And what insights into the denial and distortion of the Holocaust are made possible by the recording of antisemitic incidents by civil society?
These questions will be examined at the "Distorting History" conference on the basis of the commonalities and specifics of Holocaust denial and distortion in five European countries. The basis for the comparative analysis is the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's (IHRA) working definition of Holocaust denial and distortion.
Admission is free of charge and is subject to registration at https://gstoo.de/DistortingHistory until 6 September 2024.
You can download the conference programme below. For more information on ENMA and the project #FACTSMATTER. Defend Truth, Defeat Distortion please visit: https://enma.eu/factsmatter/
Event organisers reserve the right to exercise their domiciliary rights and to refuse entry to, or exclude from the event, persons who belong to right-wing extremist or Islamist parties or organisations, those associated with the right-wing extremist, Islamist or anti-Israeli scene, or who have previously made racist, nationalist, antisemitic or other inhumane statements.