DEBBIE Abrahams, MP for Oldham East and Saddleworth, has joined survivors of the Holocaust, and more recent genocides, to mark the launch of a new digital campaign - called "Stand Together" - to commemorate the lives of named individuals murdered by the Nazis.

The online campaign, which was launched ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day on Monday (January 27), pairs participants with the name of a person murdered by the Nazis, which they can share on social media in a digital act of remembrance.

Names of Jewish people murdered, alongside Roma, gay, disabled people and other groups are included in the project.

When Debbie clicked on the Stand Together link - at www.hmd.org.uk - she received information about Sol Saltiel, and was told he lived on Thessalonika and was murdered because he was Jewish.

Ms Abrahams said: “I’m very pleased to Stand Together with Sol, and support a campaign that explores how genocidal regimes have deliberately fractured societies by marginalising certain groups, and how these tactics can be challenged.

“There are significant numbers of individuals murdered by the Nazis about whom we know very little and Sol seems to be one of them. When Sol Saltiel’s details come up on the screen it is a chilling reminder for us to stop and think carefully about each of the six million or so people who died in the holocaust as individuals; real people with names, jobs, and loved ones.”

Thousands of names have been gathered for the campaign by the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, with the support of Yad Vashem.

Other named individuals being remembered include Gyula Sandor from Budapest, who was murdered by the Nazis for being Jewish and Siegfried Bamberger, who was murdered by the Nazis for being part of the Roma and Sinti community.

Attendees at the launch event heard remarks from Olivia Marks-Woldman, chief executive of Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, and Rachel Levy BEM, a survivor of the notorious Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps.

Ms Levy, who was able to evade the Nazis for two years by being hidden in the forest in what was then Czechoslovakia aided by non-Jewish neighbours, was sent to Auschwitz in 1944 and only narrowly escaped being sent to the gas chambers.

Speaking at the event, she told MPs: “It is important for all of us to stand together in our communities. Members of Parliament and Peers have a responsibility and an opportunity to lead by example. We must stand together – in the memory of my family, and everyone who was murdered in the Holocaust. We must stand together against division and hate today.”

Holocaust Memorial Day is the annual day of commemoration of the Holocaust, Nazi persecution and more recent genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

Ms Marks-Woldman, said: “With increasing division in communities across the world and here in the UK, now more than ever we need to stand together with others in our communities to challenge the spread of identity-based hostility. Our Stand Together project is a powerful way for us all to remember people murdered by the Nazis – as individuals with their own hopes, families and friends. It is a chance to restore their human dignity and remember where hatred can lead, and why we must all act to challenge it. Holocaust Memorial Day is an important opportunity for us all to learn from genocide, for a better future, and I’d urge everyone to get involved in activities for Holocaust Memorial Day 2020 by visiting hmd.org.uk.”