Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty

Auschwitz Memorial Commemorates 75th Anniversary Since Liberation

Hundreds of Holocaust survivors gathered together in southern Poland on Monday to honor those who died under Nazi control at Auschwitz.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe at the commemoration.WOJTEK RADWANSKI/AFP via Getty

Auschwitz Memorial Commemorates 75th Anniversary Since Liberation

Survivors laying wreaths.JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP via Getty

Auschwitz Memorial Commemorates 75th Anniversary Since Liberation

Photos taken at the scene showed survivors overcome with emotion as they remembered those who lost their lives and reflected on their own inhumane experiences in the execution camp.

Other powerful images showed survivors and their families walking through the very gates that held them hostage for so long. The German phrase, “Arbeit Macht Frei,” which translates to “Work sets you free,” can still be seen written above the doors.

A Holocaust survivor at the memorial.JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP via Getty

Auschwitz Memorial Commemorates 75th Anniversary Since Liberation

Survivors walking through the Auschwitz gates.Omar Marques/Getty

Auschwitz Memorial Commemorates 75th Anniversary Since Liberation

Many of the day’s visitors wore blue and white scarves as a nod to the striped uniforms they were forced to wear as prisoners, theBBCreported.

“Auschwitz to me is a cemetery, and I am going to honor my people,” Sally Jassy of Queens, New York, told NBC News.

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Jassy was born in Lodz, Poland, and survived both Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, though she lost her mother, father, brother, two sisters and dozens of cousins to the former.

Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall also commemorated the 75th anniversary, attending the solemn service at the infamous death camp. Leading the U.K. delegation for the ceremony alongside Lord Eric Pickles, the U.K. Post-Holocaust Envoy, the duchess joined survivors and 40 officials from across Europe for the service.

In addition to the visits at Auschwitz, there were otherevents held to commemorate the anniversaryaround the globe, including a meeting in Jerusalem last Tuesday of dozens of world leaders, likePrince Charles.

Prince Charles and Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin.Mark Neyman / GPO / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty

Prince Charles

“The magnitude of the genocide that was visited upon the Jewish people defies comprehension and can make those of us who live in the shadow of those indescribable events feel hopelessly inadequate,” Charles said in a powerful speech at Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem.

Duda did not attend the event in Jerusalem “over a disagreement with Russia over Poland’s role in triggering World War II,” NBC News reported.

Lauder, however, argued that the mission was not about politics but about Holocaust survivors, and reportedly called on world leaders to put up a greater fight against anti-Semitism.

Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron spoke in Paris, and added 175 names to the Shoah Memorial, a wall of remembrance honoring the tens of thousands of French Jews taken to concentration camps, the BBC reported.

“It has to be remembered so that it should never happen again. It never should be forgotten. It is so important,” Auschwitz survivor Ruth Scheuer Siegler, 93,recently told PEOPLE. “I have three children, seven grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. That is my dividend. Hitler didn’t succeed.”

source: people.com