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Hungarian-born Nobel Peace Prize winner and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel attends a symposium of Jewish-Hungarian solidarity in Budapest's parliament on December 9,2009.Laszlo Balogh/Reuters

Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel was responsible for making his native Romania investigate the Holocaust and face its responsibility.

Romania deported 150,000 Jews and 25,000 Roma, also known as Gypsies, to concentration camps in an area of the Soviet Union controlled by the Axis powers from 1942 to 1944, when the country was run by pro-Nazi dictator Ion Antonescu.

After communism ended, many denied or downplayed Romania's role in the Holocaust. In 2004, Wiesel chaired the Wiesel Commission which documented Romania's role in the Holocaust and a government institute was set up bearing his name in 2005.

That institute, the National Institute for the Study of the Holocaust in Romania on Sunday called him "a tireless campaigner for freedom and human rights, for respecting each other, for the understanding and the dialogue between people."

The Center for Monitoring Antisemitism in Romania thanked Wiesel for his support for the Holocaust Memorial in Bucharest, saying: "In 2003, when no one in Romania responded to our initiative for constructing the Holocaust Memorial in Bucharest, we turned, for support, to Elie Wiesel. He responded to our appeal and our project became a reality that, for generations, will honour the memory of the victims, Jews and Roma, of the WWII Romanian fascist regime."

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