News
Lyrics of the World of Auschwitz
10-02-2011
The Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum has published The Auschwitz Poems: An Anthology in English. This is a large volume of 400 poems by 250 poets from around the world. Some were Auschwitz prisoners like Primo Levi, Halina Birenbaum, Charlotte Delbo, Friedrich Löwy and Tadeusz Borowskiego, and others are modern poets including the Nobel-Prize winners Elie Wiesel, Salvatore Quasimodo, Roald Hoffmann, Wisława Szymborska, and Czesław Miłosz.
Decorated for Disinterested Goodness: They Saved Auschwitz Prisoners
02-02-2011
Polish President Bronisław Komorowski decorated Oświęcim area residents who aided inmates of the German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp Auschwitz during the war. Seventeen of the thirty-two honorees attended the ceremony held at Belweder Palace in Warsaw on February 1 in connection with the sixty-sixth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.
Project Aladdin at Auschwitz
01-02-2011
A delegation of almost 200 personalities and government officials from forty countries has visited the grounds of the former German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp Auschwitz. The guests included former Senegalese President Abdulaye Wade, UN Deputy Secretary General Asha-Rose Migiro, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, and special delegates and ambassadors from Egypt, the United States, France, Iraq, Morocco, and Turkey.
We are facing the challenge of saving the authenticity of the Auschwitz Memorial
27-01-2011
January 27, 2011 marks the passage of 66 years since the liberation of the German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp Auschwitz. During the anniversary observances Professor Władysław Bartoszewski, former prisoner and initiator of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation, addressed a special Appeal to the entire world for help in maintaining the authentic original remains of the former camp.
Saving the authenticity - our shared responsibility. Auschwitz Memorial Report 2010
26-01-2011
"The fight against time and the destruction of the historical space of the original camp is today the greatest challenge and our shared responsibility—to the victims and to the Survivors, but also to future generations, our children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren," we read in the 2010 Annual Report of the Auschwitz Memorial and Museum. The sixty-eight color pages of this Polish-English publication include information about the most important events of 2010.