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Holocaust Memorial Day: Speaker Hoyle urges people to call out intolerance

Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg and shadow minister David Lammy were among those taking part in a commemoration in Portcullis House.

Amy Gibbons
Thursday 27 January 2022 19:54 GMT
Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle hosts a ceremony to mark Holocaust Memorial Day at the Houses of Parliament in London (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle hosts a ceremony to mark Holocaust Memorial Day at the Houses of Parliament in London (Stefan Rousseau/PA) (PA Wire)

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Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle urged people to call out intolerance and work together to build a “happier future” at a special ceremony in Westminster to mark Holocaust Memorial Day.

Candles were lit at the service in Portcullis House to reflect upon the six million Jews murdered during the Holocaust, and on genocides that followed in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg shadow minister David Lammy Rabbi Debbie Young-Somers and Laura Marks, chair of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, were among those taking part in the ceremony.

It was intended that Labour MP Dame Margaret Hodge would light one of the candles at the commemoration, but she was unable to attend after testing positive for Covid-19.

Sir Lindsay said in his opening address: “The Holocaust threatened the very fabric of civilisation, and genocide must be still resisted every day.

“Our world often feels… vulnerable, and we cannot be complacent. Here in the UK, as elsewhere, prejudice and the language of hatred must be challenged by us all.”

Closing the ceremony, he added: “I hope it has given us all pause for thought to consider how we might call out, counter messages of hate, intolerance, and instead work together to create a better, safer, and a happier future.”

Speaking to the PA news agency after the event, the Commons Speaker said: “This event was absolutely important to me. Holocaust (Memorial) Day, and remembering, bringing the House together, whether it’s staff (that) work for the House, whether it’s MPs, peers, journalists, we all came as one. And that… was so important. We stood shoulder to shoulder.

“We are calling out hatred, racism, intolerance, because we believe that we shouldn’t forget six million lives that were persecuted, taken away by the Nazis, right through to Darfur.

“It was about making sure we were there together and showing unity. And quite rightly, it was that (which) mattered to me more than anything. It’s about this House. We did it last year. That was the beginning. And today’s not the end. May this continue for future parliaments.”

On the theme of this year’s event, One Day, Sir Lindsay said: “One day: what an amazing story about one person and their life before it was taken away. It is about that one day, and today’s one day for us as well. And that one day was within the chamber and the debate and also this memorial of coming together.

“So one day to me is about us being together, sharing our common belief, our common thread that runs through of decency and support for each other. That’s what one day’s about.”

Holocaust Memorial Day takes place each year on January 27, which marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, the largest Nazi death camp, in 1945.

Earlier on Thursday, Conservative MP Robert Jenrick revealed the content of a death threat letter he was recently sent, as he shared the extent of antisemitic abuse he and his family have received.

The former Cabinet minister opened a debate on Holocaust Memorial Day 2022 in the House of Commons, warning about the rise in antisemitism online in recent years.

He told MPs: “Some of us here have been on the receiving end of antisemitism. I know the member for Barking (Dame Margaret Hodge) has on many occasions.

“I recently received a letter telling to me to ‘teach my Jewish Zionist wife to put out fires’, as they intended to burn our house down and cremate our children.”

Asked after the memorial event in Portcullis House what could be done to tackle such abuse, Sir Lindsay told PA: “No Member of Parliament, no-one should have to stand up or put up with abuse. We’ve got to stand together.

“But if that is a Member of Parliament, quite rightly I am there to support them. We also have that support that we will protect MPs – them, their families, their staff, because in the end, democracy matters to me.”

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