Life & Work Magazine
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LWF delegates’ Auschwitz visit

On the third day of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) Assembly in Krakow, Poland, delegates spent the afternoon visiting the memorial and museum in the former concentration camps of Auschwitz-Birkenau.

In small groups, they walked through the gas chambers, past the ovens where bodies were burnt, seeing piles of human hair, clothes and personal items that were stripped from victims as they were sent to die.

In Auschwitz memorial and museum, in front of a wall where numerous prisoners were shot, LWF President Archbishop Dr Panti Filibus Musa and General Secretary the Rev Dr Anne Burghardt laid a wreath of flowers, accompanied by Bishop Adrian Korczago from the Krakow diocese of the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland, where the camps are located. The two LWF leaders offered a prayer “that we do not remain indifferent,” so that “what we witness here is never repeated.”

“We realise that not everybody is familiar with the history of Europe and the Second World War,” said Korczago, “but we see Auschwitz as a universal symbol of the various tragedies and atrocities that are happening to people all over the world. This is not just something that occurred almost 100 years ago, but something that keeps happening again in different regions of the world.”

At Birkenau, at the end of the visit, delegates walked silently along a ‘prayer path’, marked on the ground by a piece of grey cloth that had been knotted at intervals to resemble the barbed wire that still surrounds the camps. At one point along the path, visitors were invited to use an ink stamp to mark the cloth with the words ‘How long, O Lord?’, the anguished cry of King David recorded in Psalm 13.

At another point, visitors were given dried flowers to crush and scatter on the sandy ground, before joining together to sing a Kyrie, the traditional Christian prayer of lament.

Korczago noted: “For us, the most important message of this visit is to make people reflect on the fact that you cannot stay passive, you cannot be indifferent to the way that people are being tortured and persecuted because of their religion, their gender, or other aspects of their human condition. By witnessing these very drastic images of trauma, torture and death, we hope visitors may reflect on the different types of persecution that go on in the world today.”

The visit to Auschwitz memorial and museum, he said, is an integral part of the LWF Thirteenth Assembly, which focused on the theme “One Body, One Spirit, One Hope” [Ephesians 4:4]. “If we are all part of the One Body,” he stressed, “we cannot be insensitive to the suffering of another member or a group of members. The Holy Spirit has the power to move our hearts so that we do not remain indifferent but become clearer in our understanding of the suffering of our sisters and brothers.”

The LWF consists of 150 member churches from 99 countries, representing over 75.5 million people from the Lutheran tradition. The week-long Assembly brought together more than a thousand participants from all over the globe.

This article appears in the November 2023 Issue of Life and Work

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This article appears in the November 2023 Issue of Life and Work