On Holocaust Remembrance Day, we honor the six million Jewish people murdered by the Nazi regime, along with the millions of Roma, disabled people, LGBTQ+ people, political dissidents, and others targeted for annihilation.
We remember not only the victims, but the conditions that made genocide possible:
the normalization of dehumanization, the weaponization of law, the silence of institutions, and the active participation of corporations that profited while human beings were destroyed.
“Never Again” was not meant as a slogan. It was meant as a warning — and a responsibility.
The Holocaust did not happen in secret. It unfolded through laws, logistics, railroads, factories, financiers, and bureaucrats who told themselves they were “just doing business” or “just following orders.” History has shown us that genocide does not require universal hatred, only widespread compliance.
Today, genocide and mass atrocities are not relics of the past. They are happening now. And once again, corporations, governments, and institutions are choosing profit, convenience, and political expediency over human life.
That is why remembrance must lead to action.
No Business With Genocide means refusing to be complicit.
It means demanding that corporations stop profiting from mass violence, forced displacement, ethnic cleansing, and apartheid.
It means holding governments accountable when they enable or excuse atrocities.
It means recognizing that neutrality in the face of genocide is not neutrality — it is participation.
On this Holocaust Remembrance Day, we commit not only to memory, but to action:
- To name genocide when it is happening
- To challenge corporate complicity
- To reject the normalization of mass violence
- To stand with targeted communities before history asks why we did nothing
Remembrance without action is incomplete. Memory without responsibility is hollow.
Never Again means never again — for anyone.
👉 Take action today. Demand no business with genocide. We have our actions on the right of the screen.
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