March of the Living Leaders Warn of Global Antisemitism Surge During Auschwitz Memorial Service
Survivors and officials at Auschwitz warn of a surge in global antisemitism, linking historical lessons to modern terror attacks in Bondi Beach and Manchester.
By: AXL Media
Published: Apr 14, 2026, 8:04 AM EDT
Source: Information for this report was sourced from Israel Hayom

A Somber Warning From the Grounds of Birkenau
The 2026 March of the Living served as a platform for a stark evaluation of the current global climate regarding Jewish safety. Revital Yakhin Krakowski, the chief executive of the organization in Israel, noted that the systematic murder of 1.1 million people at the site provides a harrowing historical baseline for the current spread of hatred. According to Krakowski, the scale of contemporary antisemitism has reached unprecedented levels since the events of October 7, 2023, suggesting that the historical patterns of the past are beginning to resurface in dangerous new ways.
The Evolution of Dehumanization and Global Security
Law enforcement officials and community advocates at the press conference emphasized that the threat is no longer localized but represents a systemic challenge to democratic values. Paul Goldenberg, leading an international delegation of police officers, argued that the Holocaust was preceded not by violence, but by the steady dehumanization of a minority group. Goldenberg observed that when the safety of minorities is compromised, it serves as a reliable indicator that the broader foundations of democracy are failing, necessitating a unified global response from security agencies.
Firsthand Accounts of Modern Extremist Violence
The proceedings included visceral testimony from individuals who have survived recent antisemitic assaults, bridging the gap between historical memory and current reality. Hannah, a survivor of the Bondi Beach massacre, recounted the December 14 attack that claimed the life of her father during a Hanukkah celebration. Her account, alongside stories from survivors of shootings in Washington and Manchester, was presented to illustrate that the "new antisemitism" often manifests as violent anti-Zionism, creating a pervasive sense of insecurity for Jewish communities in the West.
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