of bad things are still happening. Therefore, he paid attention to the role and importance of education. “We believe in education very much. This is our human experience. A child learns from its mistakes and failures, and thus grows to maturity. And we want to think that thanks to its work we are also slowly maturing. We know very well that education alone is not enough, but we know that it is a foundation of what can help us mature,” noted the director of the Memorial.
Handing Romani Rose the highest educational award of the Museum, he emphasized: “No one in Europe has done more for education about the extermination of Roma and Sinti than Romani Rose, who is here with us. [...] There will be no better place than this place, there will be no better day than today, to express my gratitude to Mr. Romani Rose on behalf of everyone, giving him our Light of Remembrance.”
So far, the “Light of Remembrance” has been awarded to: Professor Władysław Bartoszewski, Krystyna Oleksy, Avner Shalev, Serge Klarsfeld, Sara J. Bloomfield and Luis Ferreiro.
The letter from the Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland Mateusz Morawiecki to the participants of the celebrations was read by Włodzimierz Bernacki, Secretary of State at the Ministry of Education and Science.
“We pay tribute to all the Roma victims of World War II. We do so in the belief that our duty to the world is to record these dramatic events in our collective memory and pass them on to future generations. The extermination of the Roma is a tragic chapter of this heritage, often unspoken of. We all have a duty to uphold the memory of the Roma victims of World War II, and to ensure that it fully returns to the pages of history; that the knowledge of the Roma extermination would become common. The lesson on the Roma chapter of the Nazi genocide cannot be forgotten,” wrote Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.
“On the 77th anniversary of the liquidation of the Roma camp, here in the largest Sinti and Roma cemetery known as “Roma Golgotha”, we once again undertake the commitment that we will do everything to ensure that times of contempt never return. We will guard with all our strength what is most precious to us - peace and an attitude of respect towards others. Today, bowing our heads over the ashes of the murdered, we jointly say the words: “We remember and we will remember”,” we read in the Prime Minister’s letter.
Roman Kwiatkowski, president of the Roma Association in Poland, emphasized the individual tragedy of the victims hidden behind large numbers. “Half a million victims is not a dead record, a statistic of the cruellest war in the world. It’s half a million broken dreams and plans, half a million human stories, none of which have been told to the end. Today we are trying to make them remain in our memory at least,” he said.
“The years of extermination have taught us, however, that there cannot be a morality that grants rights only to the elect, that limits them on the basis of race, language, nationality, denomination or orientation. Therefore, we emphasize every year as citizens of our countries, as citizens of a united Europe: the Roma must enjoy a position that is equal to others before the law. This is not a privilege; it is a fundamental right of every human being,” appealed Roman Kwiatkowski.
The Nazis regarded the Roma as a “hostile element”, “by inheritance” conditioned by a propensity to commit crimes and anti-social behaviour. From 1933, alongside Jews, they became the target of racist persecution: first by registration, depriving them of the right to practice certain professions, prohibiting mixed marriages, then forced labour, and finally imprisonment in concentration camps.
After the outbreak of World War II, a decision was made to relocate German Roma to occupied Poland. The German police authorities began to arrest and execute Roma in the occupied territories, including those at the rear of the eastern front, where they were massively murdered together with Jews by the so-called Einsatzkommando.
On the order of Heinrich Himmler to send them to Auschwitz, from 1943 the Sinti and Roma, mainly from Germany, Austria, the Czech Republic and Poland, were deported there. In total, the Germans deported about 23,000 Roma to Auschwitz, of which 2,000 were murdered without being entered into the camp records. 21,000 people were registered in the camp, of which about 19,000 died - they died of starvation and diseases, and were murdered in gas chambers at the time of the liquidation of the “Gypsy camp”.
In block 13, at Memorial and Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau, there is an exhibition commemorating the extermination of the Roma and Sinti, which shows the extraordinary dimension of the Nazi genocide committed against the Roma in Nazi-occupied Europe. In the former Birkenau camp, in sector BIIe, there is a monument commemorating the victims of the Roma nationality.
A special internet lesson devoted to the history of the deportation and extermination of the Roma and Sinti in the Auschwitz camp.