The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has urged people to resist a
“post-truth” culture “at every level and in every conversation and
debate”.
He made his comments in a speech at a memorial service in
Westminster, London, last night (Thursday) in advance of Holocaust
Memorial Day.
Each year on 27 January – the anniversary of the
liberation of Birkenau-Auschwitz – the international community reflects
on the holocaust and other genocides.
In his speech,
Archbishop Welby said: “I have just returned from a visit to Auschwitz –
Birkenau, with 60 clergy; its witness is to appalling human suffering
caused by the terrible collusion of the silent majority.
“Whilst Jews and others were caricatured and vilified by unscrupulous
politicians and venal newspapers, there was an unquestioning acceptance
by ordinary people.
“Life goes amid a culture of alternative facts, of post truth, of
collusion with deeds which sing the tunes of evil, a culture which needs
to be challenged at every level and in every conversation and debate in
this country, if it is indeed to be a place of safety and healing for
those fleeing tyranny and cruelty, if indeed life is to go on,
flourishing and fully.”
Afterwards, in an interview
for BBC News, Archbishop Justin discussed his recent visit to
Birkenau-Auschwitz, saying: “The most profound thing that struck me was
the sheer mechanistic efficiency and the normality for those who did
these terrible things: the accountants, the doctors, the architects:
they just did their jobs and they never really focused on what those
jobs were.
“It was absolute destruction of humanity – and their own humanity, although they didn’t know it.
“That was very powerfully seen; and I think that has to say to us we must be alert and we must speak out.”
In his speech,
Archbishop Justin said: “Life goes on but the end of the killing does
not mark the end of the suffering. Liberation for the survivors is a
two-edged sword. It brings an end to appalling dehumanisation and
suffering but starts the rest of a life, often marked by memories of
what has happened, memories that circle the psyche, looking for moments
to recapture the personality, and which torture and humiliate again and
again.
“The restoration of individuals and communities is our responsibility
as a society that rightly holds to biblical Judeo-Christian injunctions
to welcome the stranger in our midst and to seek the flourishing of all
within our land.”
Last night’s event, at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre,
opposite Westminster Abbey, was attended by the UK Chief Rabbi, Ephraim
Mirvis; the British government minister with responsibility for
communities, Sajid Javid; and opposition leader, Jeremy Corbyn; as well
as 200 survivors of the Holocaust and genocides in Bosnia, Cambodia,
Darfur and Rwanda.