Yom HaShoah – the day chosen by Israel to commemorate the Holocaust – is always a sombre occasion in Israel, and amidst the anxiety of wartime, it is particularly charged this year. But how the day will resonate among Jews in the United Kingdom and other Diaspora countries is less clear. Yom HaShoah is not universally marked in Diaspora synagogues and communal organisations, not least because International Holocaust Memorial Day (the more universal day to remember the victims of the Holocaust that is held every year in the UK and across the world on 27th January), somewhat complicates the process of Jewish Holocaust remembrance. In some cases, Holocaust remembrance also occurs at other times of the year, including on Tisha b’Av and Yom Kippur.
So, how do Jews in the UK and Europe remember the Holocaust? JPR’s research tells us the following: