In memory of the 6 million Jews killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust, Israel came to a standstill as the entire country paused in remembrance.
The official state ceremony in Israel, titled “Out of the Depths: The Pain of Liberation and Growth,” occurred on Wednesday evening. Despite the Oct. 7 tragedy, the ongoing conflict with Hamas, and the captivity of 59 individuals, including Americans, by Palestinian militants in Gaza, a somber shadow loomed over the nation.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu linked the Holocaust to the present dangers confronting Israel by stating, “Eighty years ago, the Jewish people were vulnerable. Today, we are not defenseless anymore. Israel stands strong, the IDF is powerful, and we are prepared to take all necessary actions to free our captives and overcome our adversaries,” he affirmed.
“No decision, no resolution can prevent us from settling the score with these despicable, terrible barbarians, who are as bad as the Nazis, who kidnapped, murdered and raped our loved ones,” added Netanyahu, in reference to Hamas.

The gates of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz, Poland, circa 1965. The sign above, “Arbeit Macht Frei,” means “Work Makes You Free.” (Keystone/GettyImages)
“The Jewish people sanctify life, not death. We come here with the hope that the covenant between the state and its citizens will be honored – that all the hostages will return, both the living to their homes and the fallen to a proper burial,” he added.
Also participating were family members of those murdered or still held captive, as well as relatives who have lost loved ones during the 18-month-long war.
Among the other participants was Merrill Eisenhower Atwater, great-grandson of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who led the Allied push to liberate Europe. This year’s March paid special tribute to the Allied forces who liberated the Nazi camps 80 years ago.
Approximately 120,000 Holocaust survivors who immigrated to Israel remain alive, according to official data, with around 13,000 others having died in the past year. Some 2,500 survivors were impacted by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks, with most having been evacuated to safety from their homes.

Holocaust survivor George Shefi, from Berlin, and his granddaughter, Dana Elan, point to his mother’s name in the Book of Names, listing victims of the Holocaust, at Auschwitz on April 23, 2025 in Oswiecim, Poland. (Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
A recent report titled “Vanishing Witnesses: An Urgent Analysis of the Declining Population of Holocaust Survivors,” projects that just half of these survivors will be living in six years, with just 30%, or about 66,250, remaining in 2035. By 2040, just 22,080 survivors will remain.
Established in 1951, Yom Hashoah is observed annually in Israel on the 27th day of the Hebrew calendar month of Nissan, falling some time in April or May, with ceremonies, programs and survivor testimonies taking place across Jewish communities worldwide.