Auschwitz survivors fear rising hate could bring on another Holocaust 80 years later
KRAKOW — As she prepared to return to Auschwitz-Birkenau on Monday, Miriam Ziegler vividly recalled how it felt to be a little girl orphaned by the Nazis and left alone in a world ruined by war.
Eighty years after the liberation of the Nazi concentration camp, the 89-year-old Ziegler said Monday the rising tide of “hatred” around the world makes her fear that history might be ready to repeat itself.
“I’m afraid that it can happen again. For my children, for my grandchildren,” she said. “I was lucky enough to survive.”
Ziegler and fellow Canadian Howard Chandler, 96, were among the Auschwitz survivors in attendance Monday as the world came together to mark the 80th anniversary of the death camp’s liberation. Dozens of world leaders, including King Charles, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, were in Poland for the event.

