Holocaust Memorial Day 2026: Bridging Generations
Date published:
First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly joined Holocaust survivor Janine Webber and hundreds of others at Belfast City Hall on Tuesday night (20 January) to mark Holocaust Memorial Day.
Holocaust Memorial Day is held annually on 27 January and marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz-Birkenau.
This year’s theme 'Bridging Generations', is a call-to-action. It encourages everyone to honour the lives lost and remember the unimaginable suffering caused by Nazi persecution. The theme emphasises the vital role of younger generations in safeguarding these memories.
Around 300 people gathered at the event, to participate in acts of remembrance for the victims of the Holocaust and those impacted by the horrors of more recent genocides.
During the Regional Commemoration, which is hosted by The Executive Office in conjunction with the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust and Belfast City Council, Holocaust survivor Janine Webber spoke of the hardship and great loss she endured due to Nazi persecution.
Janine told her story of hiding under a wardrobe with her family as a child, losing both of her parents within months of each other by the age of nine and working on a farm and living in a convent under a false identity during the Second World War.
Janine Webber BEM said:
“As a Holocaust survivor, I carry memories that must not be lost, and sharing my testimony is so important. This year’s Holocaust Memorial Day theme, Bridging Generations, reminds us that remembrance is a responsibility shared by us all. While young people carry these memories forward, every generation has a duty to listen, to learn and to act - so that these stories endure and help build a more humane world for generations to come.”
Pictured left to right are: Emma Sherrard, Outreach Team, HMDT; Adam Nickels, Head of Outreach, HMDT; First Minister Michelle O’Neill; Janine Webber, Holocaust survivor; deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly; Lord Mayor of Belfast Tracy Kelly; Yoni Wieder, Chief Rabbi of Ireland and Sir Leigh Lewis KCB, HMDT Trustee.
Speaking at the event, First Minister Michelle O'Neill said:
“Holocaust is what happens when hatred is allowed to grow, when whole communities are targeted and when the world looks away.
“For many years, survivors of the Nazi Holocaust have shared their stories. Now, as fewer survivors remain, the responsibility to preserve their truth rests with us. We must not allow their lessons to be ignored. Educating and empowering our young people is essential.
“As we remember the Holocaust, we cannot turn away from what has happened since then and right up to the present day. We must pass the duty to speak up and speak out to the next generation so they can build a world where compassion and humanity prevail.”
Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly said:
“This special Holocaust Memorial Day event is an opportunity to honour the memory of the six million Jewish men, women and children whose lives were taken during the Holocaust, and all who have been killed in subsequent atrocities.
But for remembrance to be meaningful, it must be more than an act of looking backward – it must also be an act of moral clarity about the world we are living in today so that we can create a better future where antisemitism has no place.”
Olivia Marks-Woldman, Chief Executive of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said:
“Holocaust Memorial Day is a time for people to come together across Northern Ireland to commemorate the six million Jewish men, women and children murdered during the Holocaust, and the millions more murdered under Nazi persecution. We also learn and commemorate where persecution led in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.
We are so grateful to The Executive Office for hosting this important ceremony and for their continued commitment to remembrance. By coming together to remember the past, we reaffirm our shared responsibility to protect the future - one grounded in empathy, understanding and respect.”
Lord Mayor of Belfast Tracy Kelly said:
“Remembering and learning from the Holocaust must go on; Holocaust Memorial Day calls on us to remember our responsibility to each other and our own individual power to act and to interrupt the expressions of hatred and prejudice that foster separation and hatred.”
Notes to editors:
1. Holocaust Memorial Day was initiated in 2000 to remember the victims and survivors of the Holocaust and to raise awareness and understanding of the events of the Holocaust and subsequent genocides as a continuing issue for all humanity. The date, 27 January, was chosen as it was the date of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in 1945.
2. The theme chosen by Holocaust Memorial Day Trust for Holocaust Memorial Day 2026 is ‘Bridging Generations’. For more information, log on to hmd.org.uk/hmd-theme-2026/
3. A video of the HMD 2026 Regional Commemoration will be available to view online following the event. For further details log on to www.hmd.org.uk