British Holocaust denier Nicholas Kollerstrom told the Iranian regime outlet it is time to put the "nightmare hallucination narrative" of the Holocaust "to bed."
Readers of The Jerusalem Post have their say.
78 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, survivors still measure time as "before and after the camps."
The Man in the Basement opens on January 27 in New York to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day and will soon be shown around the US (and eventually, one would hope, in Israel)
At this important inflection historical moment, we should ask ourselves: What have we learned in the last 78 years – and more importantly – what must we do?
As time goes on, there are fewer and fewer Holocaust survivors, and the responsibility for preserving the memory rests on the shoulders of us all – governments, the public and individuals.
Why designate a holiday for remembrance of the Holocaust? Because in the bleak history of genocide, the Holocaust is singular in its evil.
In light of the spike in antisemitism, there is something non-Jews need to remember this Holocaust Remembrance day.
With antisemitism on the rise and Holocaust denial more widespread, the young population in the Netherlands has been placing doubts on facts.