Deciding where to put the Stolpersteine, a plaque on the pavement marking the last place my grandmother lived in freedom before her captivity, was a journey of its own
Daniel Finkelstein, probably best known for his political and football journalism in The Times, has now written a remarkable and deeply moving memoir about how his mother (a German Jew) and his father (a Polish Jew) somehow managed to survive the horrors inflicted by the Germans and the Russians during the Second World War. It is not a surprise that the BBC has chosen it as one of its Books of the Week. While written and published before the recent outbreak of shocking violence in the Middle East precipitated by the massacres carried out by Hamas, it nonetheless provides a relevant backdrop to and partial explanation of the reactions and responses both of individual Israelis and of the Israeli state. The book is a labour of love that pays well-deserved tribute not just to his parents but also to his grandparents who made their survival possible. That any of them survived when the majority of those around them did not was partly down to luck but mostly to a combination of bloody-minded
Dr Martin Stern, who survived concentration camps at Westerbork and Theresienstadt, spoke to mark Holocaust Memorial Day, which remembers the killing of six million Jews
George Mueller, a 93-year-old Holocaust survivor, isn’t one to get emotional, even as he recounts the horrors he saw as a child in Nazi concentration camps.
“All the time I was there, people were.
There will be a remarkable gathering in the House of Commons on Wednesday. In the run-up to Holocaust Memorial Day, several inmates of the death camps are appearing before a parliamentary select committee.