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On Thursday, April 24th, Israel and Jews around the world marked Yom Hashore, or Holocaust Memory Day. At the same time, to paraphrase Usun’s Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the United Nations unleashed great evil in the world: Holocaust revisionism.

First of all, there is a collaborative campaign to cut ties between the Holocaust and Israel.

Yom Hashoah was created by the state of Israel in April 1955. However, on April 21, 2025, the UN commemorated Yom Hashoah by holding an event at the UN headquarters in New York City without input or invitation for anyone from Israel to participate. Israel, organized and hosted by the United Nations Agency for Global Communications, is never mentioned.

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Furthermore, currently hanging from the walls of the UN headquarters outside the Security Council is a “Holocaust” exhibit that wiped out references to Israel, even in sections on “after the Holocaust,” “aftermath,” and “memory.”

The Holocaust was the fate of Jews in the presence of Israel. Most of the survivors returned to their ancient homelands. As a embodiment of Jewish self-determination, Israel is the ultimate hope and commitment to “never again.”

Survivors of the forced Auschwitz camp will walk by the main gate, depicting the motto “Albeit Machtfrey” at the former Auschwitz I site held in Oswiesim, Poland on January 27, 2020. International leaders, around 200 survivors and their families are gathering in Auschwitz today to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the camp’s liberation. The Nazis killed an estimated 1 million people in their camps during Nazi Germany’s occupation of Poland during World War II. (Omar Marques/Getty Images)

The UN’s omission of Israel is not oversight. It’s part of a much broader, insidious agenda.

The United Nations has arranged consecutive Holocaust exhibits for an exhibition entitled “The United Nations and the Palestine Issues.” Onlookers are encouraged to make the obscene similarity of Jewish experiences in the Holocaust into Palestinian Arab experiences. The message is that the creation of a Jewish state was a major mistake (“violated the provisions of the UN Charter”) and was forced onto peaceful Arabs without an agency.

The current UN Holocaust exhibition has also eliminated the important features of the original exhibition since 2008. This does not include the infamous photographs of a naked skeleton Jewish man stuffed into wooden barracks at the Buchenwald forced camp, which was Nobel Prize winner Ellie Wiesel.

Survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp remain in the barracks after their release by the Allies on April 16, 1945. Ellie Wiesel, author of Nobel Prize-winning “Knight,” is on the second berth seventh from the left. (Corvis/Corvis via Getty Images)

There was also an infamous picture of a terrifying little boy in the air as the Nazis pointed to him a rifle for the crime of being Jewish.

They were replaced by a slideshow containing dozens of happy faces doing normal things before, after the war, and after the war. No crematorium, humans catalogued by open holes in the dead, tattoos of numbers, or Jews weakened in striped uniforms behind barbed wire.

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Even the current exhibition title generally reads as “a warning to all people of the dangers of hatred, prejudice, racism and prejudice.” Similarly in 2024, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres opened the United Nations “International Day” to commemorate the Holocaust by talking about “anti-Semitism and anti-Muslim prejudice.”

The United Nations has arranged consecutive Holocaust exhibits for an exhibition entitled “The United Nations and the Palestine Issues.” (Jakub Porzycki/Nurphoto via Getty Images)

Perhaps most importantly, the bold redefine of the UN exhibition of the term “Holocaust.” The move marks the culmination of a long public campaign at the United Nations, denying Jewish perceptions in death, hampering understandings of the Holocaust and anti-Semitism.

A Roman speaker, invited to attend the General Meeting on International Holocaust Memory in 2020, said, “Now, 75 years after the end of World War II, the definition of the Holocaust has been revised.”

It has been “adjusted” for one million visitors, including American students who visit the United Nations headquarters every year.

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Therefore, according to a permanent UN exhibit, “The Holocaust was the state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews across Europe, and the Rome and Sinti of half a million by Nazi Germany (1933-1945) and other racist states.

In contrast, according to Jad Vashem, the world’s Holocaust Memorial Center in Jerusalem, Israel, “The Holocaust was a complete, systematic genocide, carried out by Nazi Germany and its collaborators with the aim of annihilation of Jews.”

File – Ambassador Dani Dayan, Chairman of the United States, will speak to the audience at the European Jewish Society Symposium at the Conference Centre of the Hilton Hotel in Krakow, Poland, ahead of the 79th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 22, 2024. Palestinians from Israel. (dominika zarzycka/sopa images/lightrocket via Getty Images)

And according to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, “The Holocaust was the systematic state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime, its allies and collaborators.”

The redefine comes after a temporary exhibition mounted at the United Nations with titles such as “The Roman Holocaust.”

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It is perfectly appropriate to acknowledge any other atrocities, crimes, or genocide. That’s not the case of diverting Holocaust and Jewish history. The first one doesn’t need the second one, and it doesn’t need it. It focuses on a particular population of the special United Nations, including people of African descent, Muslims and indigenous peoples.

Beyond the UN exhibits, there are dozens of decades of UN authority figures who identified Israelis with the Nazis, likened Hamas to World War II resistance fighters, and boasted about the “Palestinian Holocaust” on their resumes. Twenty years ago, a UN source claimed that “Gaza is a huge concentration camp.” Since October 7, 2023, UN authorities have claimed that Israel is carrying out a “new Holocaust,” a “extinct field,” and a “death march.”

As the International Holocaust Memory Alliance (IHRA) correctly points out, “comparison with modern Nazi Israeli policies” is not just a lie, but also an anti-Semitic one. Certainly, the very same UN actor defends or denies Palestinian terrorism.

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We witness a calculated effort by the United Nations to block the essential condition of “never again.” That is, we understand the degradation of Jewish Nazi treatment, the unique evil of Jewish hatred, and the devastation that anti-Semitism brings to human civilization.

On this day of memory of the Holocaust, it is painfully clear that the institution built on the ashes of the Jews deserves to be relegated to the ashes of history.

Click here to read Anne Beyfsky



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