Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday said that while Jews were like an “abused animal crying in agony” at the hands of the Nazis, the modern state of Israel fights back against its enemies.While addressing Israel’s annual Holocaust Memorial Day, Netanyahu listed Iranian nuclear sites alongside Nazi death camps and said there would be no second Holocaust.“We promised there would be no second Holocaust, and this year, we fulfilled that promise in practice,” Netanyahu said.“Had we not acted, the names Natanz, Fordow, Isfahan and Parchin might have been remembered eternally in infamy, just like Auschwitz, Treblinka, Majdanek, and Sobibor,” he said.He also highlighted Israel’s military actions against Iran and its regional network, saying the country is acting decisively to neutralise existential threats and ensure its survival.Netanyahu also warned that Europe is “losing control of its identity, its values, and its responsibility to defend civilisation.”He described Europe as suffering from “deep moral weakness,” adding that Israel today is defending not only itself, but a Europe that has “forgotten so much since the Holocaust.”“It has much to learn from us,” the premier said, “especially the essential lesson of the clear moral distinction between good and evil, which in moments of truth demands that we go to war for the sake of what’s good, for the sake of life.”“Israel, on the other hand, doesn’t forget that eternal responsibility,” Netanyahu said.“Along with the US, and along with other countries with which we are creating alliances that will be spoken about in the future, we are defending ourselves — we are defending the entire world,” he said, adding that “Israel stands with the United States at the forefront of the free world.”He said that the two countries “have dealt a crushing blow to the evil regime in Iran” in their two joint operations in the past year.Meanwhile, President Isaac Herzog said that “empty words” are an insufficient response to the global surge in antisemitism, he urged international leaders to confront hatred “before it is too late.”Turning his attention to the domestic front, Herzog framed the current conflict as a test of national character.“We are one family, with a shared destiny,” Herzog said. “A family may argue, but it must never tear itself apart.”He expressed a firm conviction that while the campaign is prolonged, Israel would ultimately emerge “strengthened and empowered.”The theme for this year’s observance, “The Jewish Family During the Holocaust,” highlighted the systematic attempt to dismantle the Jewish domestic unit and the subsequent continuity of the generations that followed.Despite constraints imposed by the security situation, Israel maintained the solemnity and universal message of Holocaust Remembrance Day, reaffirming its enduring commitment: to remember, to defend life, and to ensure that such atrocities never happen again.