Muslim religious leaders joined members of a US Jewish group at Auschwitz for what organisers described as “the most senior Islamic leadership delegation” to visit the site of a Nazi German death camp.
The interfaith visit on Thursday came four days before the 75th anniversary of the camp’s January 27 1945, liberation by Soviet forces and as world leaders gathered in Jerusalem to commemorate the Holocaust.
The secretary general of the Muslim World League, Mohammad bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa, and the chief executive of the American Jewish Committee, David Harris, led the tour to the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial in Poland.
The Nazis operated extermination and concentration camps in Poland when Germany occupied the country during the Second World War.
HE Dr. #MohammadAlissa visiting Auschwitz-Birkenau this afternoon with Muslim leaders and delegates from @AJCGlobal “The unconscionable crimes to which we bear witness today are truly an affront to all of God’s children”#WeRemember #HolocaustMemorialDay pic.twitter.com/YMF5fcS3bG
— Muslim World League (@MWLOrg_en) January 23, 2020
The American Jewish Committee said that Mr al-Issa, who is based in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, led a delegation of 62 Muslims, including 25 prominent religious leaders, from some 28 countries during the “groundbreaking” visit.
The AJC delegation included members of the organisation, among them some children of Holocaust survivors.
“To be here, among the children of Holocaust survivors and members of the Jewish and Islamic communities, is both a sacred duty and a profound honour,” Mr al-Issa said.
“The unconscionable crimes to which we bear witness today are truly crimes against humanity.
“That is to say, a violation of us all, an affront to all of God’s children.”
HE Dr. #MohammadAlissa and delegates from the Muslim World League and @AJCGlobal arrive at @AuschwitzMuseum to begin our interfaith mission marking the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. pic.twitter.com/87eqaVgvTk
— Muslim World League (@MWLOrg_en) January 23, 2020
Auschwitz was the most notorious in a system of death and concentration camps that Nazi Germany operated on territory it occupied across Europe.
In all, 1.1 million people were killed there, most of them Jews from across the continent.
The visit comes as Saudi Arabia works to be seen abroad as a moderate and modernising country following decades of adherence to a hard-line interpretation of Islam known as Wahhabism.
History in the making: The most senior Islamic figure ever to visit @AuschwitzMuseum, Secretary General of @MWLOrg_en Dr. Al-Issa, begins his visit, accompanied by Muslim leaders from around the world and AJC leadership, to mark 75 years since the liberation of the Nazi camp. pic.twitter.com/43fxxJANSE
— American Jewish Committee (@AJCGlobal) January 23, 2020
The Muslim World League, under Mr al-Issa’s leadership, has embraced the effort.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s strategy to modernise the kingdom is aimed in part at attracting greater foreign investment and fostering a national Saudi identity that is not founded solely on conservative religious values.
Mr al-Issa’s outreach to Jewish organisations also coincides with a broader alignment of interests and ties emerging between the Arab Gulf states and Israel, which share a common foe in Iran.
On Friday, members of the delegation will visit the Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw and attend Muslim and Jewish religious services there.