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MEMORIAL AND MUSEUM AUSCHWITZ-BIRKENAU FORMER GERMAN NAZI
CONCENTRATION AND EXTERMINATION CAMP

News

Online educational session: "The Apex of Crime: Deportations of Jews from Hungary to KL Auschwitz" – 20 June 2024

05-06-2024
The International Center for Education about Auschwitz and the Holocaust invites you to participate in the online educational session "The Apex of Crime: Deportations of Jews from Hungary to KL Auschwitz." The session will be held on the Zoom platform on 20 June 2024 and will be simultaneously translated into English.

SAVE THE DATE: International Educational Conference “(Re)Member: Is Memory Enough in the 21st Century?”, June 30-July 2, 2025

04-06-2024
In the 2023 Auschwitz Museum report, Director Dr. Piotr M. A. Cywiński wrote: "We are witnessing the resurgence of old, dehumanising, antisemitic, and racist demonic ideologies and the rise of new tensions and international conflicts."

Memoria Magazine no. 80. Fact-checking review of TV Series "Tattooist of Auschwitz"

30-05-2024
'Memoria' is an online magazine dedicated to the history of Auschwitz, the Holocaust as well as memory and education around the world.

39th session of the International Auschwitz Council

28-05-2024
The 39th session of the International Auschwitz Council took place at the State Museum at Majdanek in Lublin on 22 May 2024. The session was chaired by Dani Dayan.

84th anniversary of the first transport of Poles to Auschwitz - 14 June 2024

20-05-2024
On 14 June 1940, the Germans transferred a group of 728 Poles from the prison in Tarnów to the Auschwitz camp. The group included soldiers of the September campaign, members of independence underground organisations, school pupils and students, and a small group of Polish Jews. They were given numbers from 31 to 758. Of the 728 deported prisoners, 325 survived the war, 292 perished, while the fate of 111 is unknown to date.

Google Supports the Online Guided Tours of the Auschwitz Memorial

17-05-2024
Google will support the development of the "Auschwitz in Front of Your Eyes" project, enabling people from around the world to visit the former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz-Birkenau with a live guide in an online format. Through $1M in funding and support from Google.org, Google’s philanthropic arm, the Memorial will expand education about Auschwitz and the Holocaust to reach people everywhere, including making it accessible to people with disabilities, those in remote areas and unable to travel there.