
Today’s Europe, despite the wounds left by the wars and the Holocaust, has sought to build a common identity based on cooperation, human rights, and remembrance.
The Greek Jewish communities, though small in number after the devastation of the Holocaust, remain alive in cities such as Thessaloniki, Ioannina, and Athens.
With synagogues, schools, and cultural activities, as well as the creation of the Holocaust Museum under construction in Thessaloniki, they actively contribute to the preservation of memory and to dialogue about history and tolerance.
Today, they stand as valuable bridges between past and present, reminding us that memory can become a force for the future.