Auschwitz memorial launches Facebook page
WARSAW, Poland — The memorial museum at Auschwitz has launched a Facebook page, hoping that the popular social networking site will help it reach young people around the globe and engage them in discussions about the former Nazi death camp and the Holocaust.
The site, which opened earlier this week, already has more than 1,800 “fans” who have subscribed, with the number growing by the hour — some 500 signed up Thursday morning alone. Many have left messages in English, Hebrew and Polish, the majority expressing the sentiment: “Never again.”
“This is a kind of an experiment,” memorial spokesman Pawel Sawicki told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Facebook is the tool that young people are using to communicate, so if we want to reach them, we should be using their tool.”
The museum already launched a Polish-language page on YouTube at the end of 2008 and an English-language page two months ago. Some 22,000 people have viewed the films so far.
Between 1940-45, some 1 million people, mostly Jews, were killed or died of starvation, disease and forced labor at the camp, which the Nazis built in occupied Poland. Sawicki said the memorial’s 1 million annual visitors are primarily students and other young people.
The Auschwitz memorial is not the first Holocaust-related organization to venture onto Facebook: The Simon Wiesenthal Center counts more than 2,000 “fans” on its site and has also used Twitter. There is an unofficial Facebook page dedicated to Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, which says it plans to launch an official page in the coming weeks.
Facebook, which turned 5 this year, counts more than 175 million users worldwide.
The Anne Frank memorial has a YouTube channel, as does Yad Vashem, which offers information in English, Hebrew, Spanish and Arabic.
“Everyone’s using the Internet and trying their best to reach out to as many people as possible, and obviously one of the best ways of reaching young people is through the modern use of technology,” said the Wiesenthal Center’s Efraim Zuroff in a telephone interview from Jerusalem.
Though the Internet is also rife with far-right sites that attempt to distort or deny the Holocaust, Zuroff said that was no reason for others to dismiss using the Web.
“The vehicle depends on the content,” he said. “If the content is helpful, if the content is educational, there’s no reason not to use the vehicle.”
There are also already scores of Facebook groups dedicated to Auschwitz started by individuals, but the Auschwitz page — found by searching the site with the keywords “Auschwitz Memorial” — lets people participate in discussions moderated by the memorial’s staff.
So far, the site has seen no postings by Holocaust deniers, Sawicki said.
If they do show up, they will be quickly removed, Sawicki said, saying that to engage Holocaust deniers in dialogue is “a waste of time.”
“I think we have more important things to do than try to convince a very small group of people” that the Holocaust happened, he said.
Associated Press writer Ryan Lucas contributed to this report.
Related News
Washington tourism launches 'Lost Symbol' Web site for Dan Brown bookSeptember 14th, 2009 Washington tourism launches 'Lost Symbol' Web siteWASHINGTON — Washington is anticipating a flurry of visits from fans of Dan Brown's new thriller, "The Lost Symbol."
Fans of "The Da Vinci Code" novelist flocked to the Louvre in Paris and other sites in Europe that were featured in that book. One church in Scotland, the Rosslyn Chapel, saw a threefold increase in visitors after the book became a bestseller and movie.
Auschwitz blueprints given to Israeli PM for display in Yad VashemAugust 27th, 2009 Auschwitz blueprints given to Israeli PMBERLIN — Architectural plans for the Auschwitz death camp that were discovered in Berlin last year were handed over to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday for display at Israel's Holocaust memorial. The 29 sketches of the death camp built in Nazi-occupied Poland date as far back as 1941.
Auschwitz blueprints detailing 'factory of death' given to Israel for display in JerusalemAugust 27th, 2009 Nazi death camp blueprints given to IsraelBERLIN — Sketched on yellowing parchment, the 29 blueprints presented to Israel's prime minister Thursday lay out the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz in chilling detail, with gas chambers, crematoria, delousing facilities and watch towers drawn to scale. "There are those who deny that the Holocaust happened," Benjamin Netanyahu said as he accepted the documents as a gift to Israel's Holocaust memorial, where they will go on display next year.
Facebook lite: updatesAugust 12th, 2009 What is Facebook lite? Well it appears as it looks- a lighter version of Facebook, or might be a micro facebook that will offer users a "faster, simpler version of Facebook with a Twitter-like experience. Reportedly , tonight, a number of Facebook users have received beta invitations to a 'lite' version of the popular social networking service.
Pope Benedict XVI: Nazi concentration camps were 'extreme symbols of evil'August 9th, 2009 Pope: Nazi concentration camps a symbol of evilCASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy —Pope Benedict XVI said Sunday that Nazi concentration camps were "extreme symbols of evil" and hell on earth. The German-born pontiff, who was forced to join the Hitler Youth, was remembering two saints who had died at the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz.
Former Auschwitz slave laborer donates Holocaust victims' jewelry to memorialJune 16th, 2009 Jews' jewelry from Holocaust donated to memorialJERUSALEM — As a slave laborer in Auschwitz, Meyer Hack was forced to sort through the tattered clothing stripped off inmates before they were sent to the gas chambers. He gathered valuable belongings hidden inside the clothes, stuffed them in a sock, hid them and later spirited them to freedom.
Obama visits Nazi camp Buchenwald, calls it 'ultimate rebuke' to Holocaust deniersJune 5th, 2009 Obama visits Buchenwald site, lays roseWEIMAR — President Barack Obama says the Buchenwald concentration camp "is the ultimate rebuke" to those who deny the Holocaust. Obama on Friday visited the Nazi-era camp where 56,000 people died.
Auschwitz to get €4.2 million ($5.9 million) from EU, settles dispute with Holocaust heirJune 4th, 2009 EU donates millions to preserve AuschwitzWARSAW, Poland — The European Union will give euro4.2 million ($5.9 million) to help preserve Auschwitz, the former Nazi death camp which more than six decades after the World War II is in a state of serious disrepair. Rafal Pioro, who heads Auschwitz's conservation department, said the EU recently promised 19 million zlotys (about euro4.2 million) to fund badly needed repairs on the camp's structures.
Hidden Auschwitz message hailed as a rare find and cause for hopeMay 6th, 2009 Hidden Auschwitz message hailed as rare findOSWIECIM, Poland — A note hidden in a bottle by Auschwitz prisoners 65 years ago in a desperate attempt to preserve a small piece of themselves was added Wednesday to the archives of the Polish state-run museum dedicated to the memory of the former Nazi death camp's victims. Museum Director Piotr Cywinski hailed the document — a list of the names of seven camp inmates that was discovered last month — as a rare discovery and a cause for celebration, given that at least three of the prisoners are still living today.
A few good friends: Facebook, Twitter all the rage as Pentagon reaches out to new generationMay 1st, 2009 Pentagon looks to Facebook, TwitterFORT MONROE, Va. — You don't often hear a three-star general using the word "friend" as a verb.
Facebook and Twitter among Pentagon's newest tools to reach out to younger AmericansMay 1st, 2009 Pentagon uses Facebook, Twitter to spread messageFORT MONROE, Va. — You don't often hear a three-star general using the word "friend" as a verb.
Jewish boxer who fought for his life in Auschwitz dead at 86April 30th, 2009 Jewish death camp boxer dead at 86JERUSALEM — Salamo Arouch, a Jewish boxer who survived the Auschwitz death camp by fighting exhibition bouts for Nazi officers and inspired a Hollywood movie about his life, has died in Israel, the Haaretz newspaper reported Thursday. He was 86. Haaretz did not give the cause of death of the Greek-born fighter, but quoted his daughter Dalia Gonen as saying he had been unwell since suffering a stroke 15 years ago.
Simone Veil, Nazi death camp survivor and French political icon, inducted into Legion of HonorApril 29th, 2009 Auschwitz survivor in French Legion of HonorPARIS — French President Nicolas Sarkozy has decorated concentration camp survivor and political icon Simone Veil as an officer in the Legion of Honor. A centrist politician widely respected on both sides of the political spectrum, Veil is best known in France for spearheading the heated battle to legalize abortion here.
Workers at school near Auschwitz find letter in bottle hidden by inmates in bunker wallApril 27th, 2009 Workmen in Poland find hidden Auschwitz letterWARSAW, Poland — The note, written in pencil then rolled up and inserted in a bottle, contains the names of seven young people who probably thought they were doomed to die in the notorious Auschwitz death camp. A construction crew renovating a cellar near the Auschwitz site discovered the bottle hidden in a concrete wall, officials said Monday.
March of Living honours Holocaust victimsApril 21st, 2009 WARSAW - Some seven thousand people walked silently at Auschwitz in Poland Tuesday to honour victims of the Holocaust amid a controversial UN conference on racism. The March of the Living included Holocaust survivors, some 1,800 Poles and young Jewish students from across the world in a walk from the former Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitz to Birkenau.