GENEVA, Switzerland — The United Nations rights chief called Monday for the world to learn the hard lessons provided by the Holocaust and reject hatred and dehumanization “to safeguard our future.”
In a statement issued ahead of International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Tuesday, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk insisted that the dark history offered “striking lessons” for the world today.
“It is difficult to fathom that within living memory, a group of deluded killers inflicted unspeakable atrocities on millions of Jews and members of other minorities,” he said.
The Nazi regime during World War II “persecuted them, stripped them of dignity, and ultimately murdered them with the horrific efficiency of an assembly line,” he said. “Systematically, openly, and without consequences.”
Türk stressed that the “the appalling cruelty was not born in medieval darkness, but in the broad daylight of a supposedly modern society”.
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“The genocide did not begin with concentration camps and gas chambers; it started with apathy and silence in the face of injustice, and with the corrosive dehumanization of the other,” he said. “Today, and always, we need to remember this.”
Türk highlighted that “in a disturbing trend, threats and assaults against Jews have risen sharply in recent years.”
And “hatred and dehumanization are creeping into our daily lives, including through our social media feeds,” he warned.

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk delivers a speech at the opening of the 58th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland, on February 24, 2025. (Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)
But Türk stressed there was reason for hope, insisting that people today were “equipped with the memory of how exclusion can turn into annihilation, if we look away.”
“We are equipped with education and unprecedented access to information to seek truth and to understand our differences,” he said. “And we are equipped with human rights, backed by international law –- forged from the ashes of war to protect humanity from repeating its darkest chapters.”
Türk insisted that “we need to use these tools at all times against the plague of racism, antisemitism, and dehumanization.”
Education about the Holocaust and human rights was vital, he said. “Above all, we must stand up for our shared humanity – each and every day.”
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