Memorial to the Six Million at Greenwood Cemetery.

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Memorial to the Six Million at Greenwood Cemetery.

Credit: Courtesy of Atlanta Preservation Center

About 500 people, including U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, Deputy Consul General of Israel Anna Shteingart, a handful of state and local politicians, and dozens of Jewish community leaders gathered at Greenwood Cemetery in Southwest Atlanta today to mark Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day.

The event was organized by The BremanEternal Life-Hemshech, the Lillian and A.J. Weinberg Center for Holocaust Education, and Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta.

The 59th annual ceremony was also a rededication of the Memorial to the Six Million, which has recently undergone a complete renovation led by Landmark Preservation with help from the Atlanta Preservation Center.

Rocks left by visitors to the Memorial to the Six Million on May 5, 2024.

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Rocks left by visitors to the Memorial to the Six Million on May 5, 2024.

Credit: Rough Draft Atlanta

Child survivor address antisemitism

George Rishfeld, a child survivor of the Holocaust, was a toddler when his parents handed him over to the Fronckvics, a Catholic family with whom Rishfeld lived for three years. He said the Fronckvics, known as “righteous Gentiles,” took him in “because it was the right thing to do. They saw me as a human being and not as a Jew.” Both of his parents also survived the war.

George Rishfeld

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Holocaust survivor George Rishfeld at the Yom HaShoah event on May 5, 2024, at Greenwood Cemetery.

Credit: Keith Pepper

Rishfeld also expressed concern over recent upticks in antisemitism around the world, particularly on U.S. college campuses following the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attacks on Israel by Hamas and the subsequent war.

“Before Hitler declared war on the United States in 1941, there were Nazis marching in our streets as Americans. Today at college campuses across our nation, there are Americans marching as Nazis [and shouting], ‘we’re all Hamas!’ Make no mistake about it, when students protest, burn the American flag and chant ‘Death to America,” it has little to do with [the] Israeli military response to the murderous rampage by Hamas Oct. 7, and much to do with antisemitism by Israel’s neighbors and others around the world.

We have to address this head on we cannot stand by without saying or doing something. We must prevent them from occurring. We need to challenge hateful statements and occurrences strongly and immediately.”

— George Rishfeld, Holocaust survivor

This story comes to GPB through a reporting partnership with Rough Draft Atlanta.