Leeds secondary schools to become first to take part in groundbreaking Auschwitz-Birkenau virtual tours: Auschwitz sml

12 Feb 2024

Leeds secondary schools to become first to take part in groundbreaking Auschwitz-Birkenau virtual tours

Lord Mayor of Leeds International relations Schools

Students in Leeds given the chance to learn about the impacts of the Holocaust and genocide through new online initiative

Secondary school students in Leeds learning about the impact of the Holocaust are set to become the first in Britain to experience a groundbreaking online live-guided tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial in Poland, the site of the infamous former concentration and extermination camp.

The “Auschwitz in Front of Your Eyes” tour, run by the Warsaw-based Auschwitz Birkenau Foundation and the Auschwitz Memorial, uses an online platform to connect memorial educators with audiences anywhere in the world. 

Each group spends up to two hours virtually touring the former Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II -Birkenau sites to learn about the history of the complex and its impact. Participants can pose questions directly to their guides in real-time and multimedia content will be used to help illustrate answers, including testimony from Holocaust survivors. 

Considered the epicentre of the Holocaust, over 1.1 million men, women, and children lost their lives at the German Nazi camp of Auschwitz during its nearly five years of operation. Some 1 million Jews, 70 thousand Poles, 21 thousand Roma and Sinti, and 14 thousand Soviet prisoners of war were murdered there. Among smaller groups of victims were Jehovah’s Witnesses and gay men. Among people deported to Auschwitz, there were also people with physical disabilities who had very little chance of survival.

Deputy Leader of Leeds City Council and executive member for economy, culture and education Councillor Jonathan Pryor, said: "Leeds is a city built on tolerance, understanding, and learning. As a society, we must never forget the horrific actions that humans are capable of to ensure that this is never repeated.  I’m proud that young people in Leeds will become some of the first participants in the Auschwitz-Birkenau virtual tour. 

“This an incredible opportunity for people around the world to further their understanding of genocide by seeing the scale of the camps, and contemporary accounts of what took place.

“Sadly, the world is still blighted by hate. Education is the best weapon in fighting the threat of future atrocities and the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial acts as a powerful warning from history. The virtual tour will become an invaluable tool in anti-discrimination education here in Leeds, nationally and internationally.”

One fully funded tour will be offered to each of the 44 secondary schools in Leeds and the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation puts no limits on the number of attendees in each session. The tours are aimed at the 14–15-year-old age group and will be in line with the year 9 and 10 curriculum, but it will be left to individual schools to govern student suitability and the number of attendees. 

The first year of the programme has been funded by individual councillors who have used some of their community funding allowances to raise £4,600. The initiative to bring the “Auschwitz in Front of Your Eyes” programme to Leeds secondary schools supports the national work of the Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, which the United Kingdom is currently chairing. 

Speaking about the importance of the project to Anglo-Polish relations, the United Kingdom’s Ambassador to Poland, Anna Clunes, said: “The 'Auschwitz in front of your eyes' tour is an important example of Polish-British cooperation to educate future generations, preserve the memory of the Holocaust, and ensure the tragedy of Auschwitz-Birkenau never happens again. 

“The UK is committed to fighting antisemitism and will be honoured to lead international efforts to promote Holocaust education and remembrance in 2024.”

Leeds took part in a trial of the virtual tour system in May 2023, following Councillor Robert W. Gettings’ visit to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial in November 2022 as Lord Mayor of Leeds. A reciprocal visit to Leeds by the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation chief executive, Wojciech Soczewica, took place in January 2023 in which Mr Soczewica met Leeds City Council’s executive member for economy, culture, and education Councillor Jonathan Pryor to discuss the project. 

Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation chief executive, Wojciech Soczewica, said: “In one year the world will be commemorating the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. We will be listening to survivors, who over the past decades have been warning against hatred, indifference and polarisation. Their personal stories as testimony of the crimes committed at Auschwitz and other sites of killing during World War 2 have been shaping remembrance across Europe and the world. As a result, memorials have become centres of education for many generations. They have secured the voices of the victims, laid out the roles of perpetrators, and helped us understand how exclusion has led to the furnaces of Auschwitz.

"Now, in a rapidly changing environment, where new technologies provide global access to content, it is our responsibility to seek ways in which historical truth about Europe’s darkest chapter can be reached by everyone. I believe that we can and should learn from history. This is why the partnership with Leeds leading to the introduction of live, interactive tours at the memorial for all public schools is such an opportunity. Because it will allow the city’s students to see with their own eyes, directly from their school classes the universality of antisemitism and Auschwitz. This programme becomes a reality at a particular time. It should serve as a vaccine against all sorts of discrimination.

The collaboration with the City of Leeds, its leadership and city officials has been encouraging. Together we are demonstrating that even in challenging times, with good will and personal commitment, innovation across borders is possible. Thus, the outreach of the memory of the crimes of Auschwitz and its impact on today’s societies will become global. I am confident that this is just the beginning of a close relationship, one based on common values and responsibility towards our difficult past."

Former Lord Mayor of Leeds, Councillor Robert W Gettings MBE JP said: “The horrors of the Holocaust must never be repeated, and we must allow as many people as possible the opportunity to learn the consequences of prejudice and hate.  

“Sadly, the chilling shadow of genocide is still an ever-present issue in the world today, so the need for education on the product of hate is more pressing than ever. I am therefore proud that Leeds is going to play such a pivotal role in a project that could have a worldwide impact in furthering tolerance and understanding of each other. 

“I look forward to hearing the feedback from those young people in Leeds who take part in the project and to offering this unique opportunity to as many students as possible.”

Schools in Leeds will be able to book their virtual tour from 19 February 2024 and further information on the project will be made available on the Leeds For Learning at https://www.leedsforlearning.co.uk/Store/Service/53569 

Ends

Notes for editors

Photo Credit: Leeds City Council. Caption: Barbed wire fences and watch tower at the Auschwitz 1 camp. 

World Holocaust Alliance: A world that remembers the Holocaust | IHRA (holocaustremembrance.com) 

Further information on the Auschwitz virtual tour programme: https://afmarketingdev.appsflyer.com/technology-in-the-service-of-humanity/

For more details on Auschwitz please see the factsheet here: https://www.thinglink.com/scene/1512465622422781953 

For media enquiries contact:

Leeds City Council Communications team
communicationsteam@leeds.gov.uk