Auschwitz museum launches tool to fight Holocaust denial
Warsaw, Poland -- The museum at the site of the former Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau launched on Wednesday a campaign to fight Holocaust denial on social media.
The 'Stop Denial' online tool helps individuals debunk common denialist arguments using 'documents, photographs, witness accounts or the results of historical research', said the Auschwitz museum in southern Poland.
It includes a manual instructing users to respond to denialist content on social media by commenting on posts with a link to the 'Stop Denial' website.
The museum cites examples of false claims it aims to debunk, such as statements like 'Official documentation lacks information about the extermination at Auschwitz' and the 'International Red Cross raised no objections after visit to camp'.
Museum director Piotr Cywinski said in a statement that in the past 'few could look into the eyes of the living survivors and say in cold blood that all their testimonies were lies'.
'Today, there are few left. So anti-Semitic, xenophobic, populist voices are rising up,' he added.
Museum spokesman Bartosz Bartyzel said the launch of the campaign follows a 'surge of negationist activity' across social media and in public discourse.
'The best solution, help, rescue for disinformation is information,' he told AFP.
Earlier this month, MEP Grzegorz Braun -- a candidate in this year's Polish presidential election who garnered more than six percent of the vote -- claimed in a radio interview that 'Auschwitz with gas chambers is unfortunately fake'.
In May, the museum warned against Facebook posts featuring AI-generated fictional images of camp victims. The museum has long used its social media accounts to share authentic victim photos and information to raise Holocaust awareness.
Nazi Germany built the death camp in the city of Oswiecim after occupying Poland during World War II.
The Holocaust site has become a symbol of Nazi Germany's genocide of six million European Jews, one million of whom died at the camp between 1940 and 1945.
More than 100,000 non-Jews also died at Auschwitz-Birkenau, including non-Jewish Poles, Roma, and Soviet soldiers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Ukrainian anti-corruption agencies uncover drone procurement graft scheme
Ukrainian lawmakers are calling to vote for a new bill proposed by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy restoring the independence of the country's anti-corruption agencies at the parliament session hall in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, July 31, 2025.(AP Photo/Vadym Sarakhan) KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine's anti-corruption agencies said they had uncovered a major graft scheme involving inflated military procurement contracts, just two days after Ukraine's parliament voted to restore the agencies' independence. In a joint statement published Saturday on social media, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO) said the suspects had taken bribes in a scheme that used state funds to buy drones and other military equipment at inflated prices. 'The essence of the scheme was to conclude state contracts with supplier companies at deliberately inflated prices,' the statement said, adding that offenders had received kickbacks of up to 30 per cent of the contracts' value. The anti-corruption bodies did not identify the detainees, but said a Ukrainian lawmaker, local district and city officials, and National Guard servicemen were involved. Four people have been arrested so far, they said. The Interior Ministry said the National Guard personnel implicated in the case were removed from their positions. Drones have become a crucial asset in modern warfare for both Ukraine and Russia, enhancing military reconnaissance, precision strikes, and strategic flexibility on the battlefield. The majority of Russian military assets destroyed by Ukrainian forces, including manpower and heavy weaponry, have been targeted by drones. Drone production is also a key aspect of Kyiv's hopes to expand domestic military production and export markets. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the development in his nightly address on Saturday, calling the graft scheme 'absolutely immoral' and thanking the anti-corruption agencies for their work. 'Unfortunately, these corruption schemes involved the procurement of electronic warfare systems and FPV drones ... There must be full and fair accountability for this,' he said in his address, posted to X. In an earlier post, which also included photos of him meeting with the agency heads, Zelenskyy said it is 'important that anti-corruption institutions operate independently,' adding that 'the law passed on Thursday guarantees them all the tools necessary for a real fight against corruption.' The exposure of the graft scheme by NABU and SAPO came just two days after Ukraine's parliament voted to restore their independence. Ukraine's Parliament on Thursday overwhelmingly approved the bill presented by Zelenskyy, reversing his earlier contentious move that curbed their power and sparked a backlash, including street protests, a rarity in wartime. Last week's measure to place the watchdogs under the oversight of the prosecutor-general prompted rebukes from Ukrainians, the European Union and international rights groups. It raised fears that the government could meddle in investigations and potentially shield its supporters from scrutiny. Fighting entrenched corruption is crucial for Ukraine's aspirations to join the European Union and maintain access to billions of dollars of vital Western aid in the all-out war, now in its fourth year. It's also an effort that enjoys broad public support. Morton reported from London. Elise Morton And Samya Kullab, The Associated Press


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Pope Leo XIV tells 1 million Catholic youths that they are ‘the sign a different world is possible'
Pope Leo XIV leaves at the end of a Mass with young people participating in the Youths Jubilee at the Tor Vergata field in Rome, Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) ROME — Pope Leo XIV on Sunday told more than a million Catholic youths at a closing Mass for a weeklong encounter with the next generation of faithful that they are 'the sign that a different world is possible' where conflicts can be resolved with dialogue, not weapons. In his closing blessing for the Jubilee of Youth, Leo remembered the young people of Gaza and Ukraine and other countries 'bloodied by war' who could not join their celebration. 'We are closer than ever to young people who suffer the most serious evils, which are caused by other human beings,' Leo said. 'We are with the young people of Gaza. We are with the young people of Ukraine, with those of every land bloodied by war.' 'My young brothers and sisters, you are the sign that a different world is possible. A world of fraternity and friendship, where conflicts are not resolved with weapons, but with dialogue.' The young people camped out in sprawling fields southeast of Rome overnight after attending a vigil service on Saturday, also presided by Leo who has been ferried from Vatican City by helicopter. The special Jubilee celebration is part of the Holy Year that is expected to draw 32 million people to the Vatican for the centuries-old pilgrimage to the seat of Catholicism. The Vatican said more than 1 million young people were present, along with 7,000 priests and 450 bishops. During the Sunday homily, Leo urged the participants to 'spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith' when they return home to some 150 countries. 'Aspire to great things, to holiness, wherever you are,' Leo urged the young faithful. 'Do not settle for less. You will then see the light of the Gospel growing every day, in you and around you.' Leo reminded the crowd that their next encounter will be for World Youth Day, set for Aug. 3-8, 2027, in Seoul, South Korea. The week has been a joyous gathering marked by bands of youths singing hymns as they move down cobblestoned streets, praying rosaries in piazzas and standing for hours at the Circus Maximus to confess their sins to priests offering the sacrament in a dozen languages. Leo also shared some tragic news on Saturday: two young people who had made the pilgrimage to Rome had died, one reportedly of cardiac arrest, while a third was hospitalized. Rain overnight awakened the faithful but didn't dampen their spirits. 'At least we were a little covered, but we still got a bit wet. We lost our voices a little. It was cold, but we woke up to a beautiful sun and view,' said Soemil Rios, 20, from Puerto Rico. 'Despite the difficulties, it was very nice and very special to have been part of this historic moment.' Sister Giulia De Luca, from Rome, acknowledged that 'waking up was a bit tough,' but that she was looking forward to seeing the pope again. 'It will be very nice to conclude a very intense week together. Definitely a lot of fun, but also very challenging in many ways,' she said. Barry reported from Milan Colleen Barry And Paolo Santalucia, The Associated Press


National Post
3 hours ago
- National Post
Raymond J. de Souza: How the Helsinki Accords helped end communism
Article content Carter agreed with Brezhnev on that reading and attacked Helsinki as 'legitimizing Soviet domination.' Reagan considered the accords a moral abandonment of the enslaved nations of what he would characterize eight years later as the 'evil empire.' Article content Everyone got it wrong. As Kissinger himself would write later: 'Rarely has a diplomatic process so illuminated the limitations of human foresight.' Article content To get his de facto recognition of empire, Brezhnev conceded to the inclusion of 'basket three' in the Helsinki accords. Those provisions committed the signatories to permitting the peaceful changes of international borders, allowing states to leave or join alliances (NATO and Warsaw Pact) and, most remarkably, committed the Soviets to 'the universal significance of human rights and fundamental freedoms … in conformity with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations and with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.' Article content The Soviets had solemnly signed a promise to honour human rights. Brezhnev thought he had made an easily ignored concession to gain a hard-won recognition of Russian imperial ambitions. He was wrong. Article content 'Helsinki became, in short, a legal and moral trap,' in the judgement of leading Cold War historian John Lewis Gaddis. 'Without realizing the implications, Brezhnev thereby handed his critics a standard, based on universal principles of justice, rooted in international law, independent of Marxist-Leninist ideology, against which they could evaluate the behaviour of his and other communist regimes.' Article content By 1976, a 'Public Group to Promote Observance of the Helsinki Accords' was operating in Moscow with the endorsement of Andrei Sakharov, the leading scientist-dissident. 'Helsinki Groups' were established in other communist countries, and the regimes were unable to silence them, given that they existed to monitor what the Soviet regime had itself promised. Article content Contrary to Brezhnev's securing the legitimation of communist rule at home and in the near abroad, Gladdis concluded that, 'the Helsinki process became instead the basis of legitimizing opposition to Soviet rule.' Article content Five years after Helsinki, Pope John Paul II had visited Poland and shook the regime to its foundations; Lech Wałęsa was leading the strikes that would lead to Solidarność, the Polish trade union that heralded an end to communist rule; Václav Havel had formed Charter 77 to advocate for human rights in Czechoslovakia; Margaret Thatcher was in Downing Street and Reagan was on his way to the White House. Article content The Cold War had always been at heart a moral argument, but the realpolitik of the 1970s sought to minimize that. Helsinki was realpolitik in intention, but massively not in effect. It restored the language of morality, of good and evil, to the Cold War. And once that was done, the end happily came sooner than expected. Article content