Presidential Message on Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust
Summary
The White House issued a presidential message commemorating the Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust, honoring the memory of over 6 million Jewish lives lost and other victims of Nazi persecution. The message references the establishment of a Federal Task Force to Combat Antisemitism and directs the Department of Justice to prosecute those who threaten or harm Jewish Americans.
What changed
The White House issued a presidential message commemorating the Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust, honoring the memory of over 6 million Jewish victims and other groups targeted during the Holocaust. The message references the establishment of the Federal Task Force to Combat Antisemitism and directs the Department of Justice to pursue those who threaten Jewish Americans.
This commemorative statement does not create compliance obligations for regulated entities. It is informational in nature, reaffirming commitment to fighting antisemitism without imposing new legal requirements or deadlines on businesses or individuals.
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Apr 14, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Presidential Message on the Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust
The White House
April 13, 2026
During the Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust, our Nation remembers the more than 6 million innocent Jewish lives taken in one of the most horrific atrocities and worst acts of anti-Semitism in human history; we commemorate the Roma and Sinti, Slavic and Polish people, persons with disabilities, Soviet prisoners of war, Jehovah’s Witnesses, people targeted for their sexual orientation, and countless others who were victims of the Holocaust; and we renew our unwavering commitment to ensuring that such evil is vanquished forever.
On Yom HaShoah, we recall the horrors Nazi Germany inflicted across Europe during the harrowing years of the Second World War, where men, women, and children of many backgrounds were subjected to vicious acts of persecution, degradation, and death by methods beyond comprehension. Yet, in the midst of this unfathomable darkness, the resilience of the human spirit endured.
From the outset of my Administration, I have taken decisive action to defend the God-given worth of every human being. By establishing the Federal Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, my Administration is bolstering coordination across federal agencies in an effort to prevent acts of hatred and violence in our streets and on our college campuses that were allowed to spread under my predecessor. I am directing the Department of Justice to relentlessly pursue those who threaten or harm Jewish Americans, and we will not stop until every case of terrorism perpetrated against the Jewish people is prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
As our Nation marks these Days of Remembrance, we honor the memory of all who were murdered and vow to never forget the victims of the Holocaust—the most heinous violation of human dignity in the history of the world. Together, we reaffirm our solemn obligation to stand guard against antisemitism in every form and carry forward the enduring legacy of the more than 6 million innocent souls of the Holocaust with vigilance and unwavering resolve. May the memories of all who perished forever be a blessing.
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