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It was easier to die : Holocaust survivor shares her story as Australia marks darkest chapter in world history

Born in Czechoslovakia in 1926, Mrs Horak is a Jewish Holocaust survivor. She describes herself as a graduate of Nazi Germany s regime of persecution that resulted in the murder of six million Jews, along with other minorities.  On Wednesday, she shared her story to mark the 76th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi extermination camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, which was located in then-occupied Poland.  More than 1.1 million people, primarily Jews, were killed at the camp.  READ MORE I am a Holocaust survivor. I am a witness. I was in Auschwitz as an inmate, not a tourist, Mrs Horak planned to say during an evening commemoration.

Same views, very different fates for Court and Folau

Same views, very different fates for Court and Folau January 28, 2021 12.05am Normal text size Credit: The decision to award Margaret Court Australia’s highest civilian honour, ignoring her very public statements against same-sex marriage and homosexuality, does seem outrageous after Rugby Australia in 2019 terminated the employment of one of Australia’s most outstanding footballers, Israel Folau, for his public, almost-identical views (“Court’s honour ‘was to balance Laver award’”, January 27). He had to leave Australia to continue playing the sport he loved. Janelle Cann, Bellevue Hill How ironic Court was given her AC because of gender. This is the person who has waged a bitter campaign against gender and sexuality for many years. Besides, Evonne Goolagong Cawley had already received her well-deserved AC in 2018, thus making a nonsense of the gender balance disparity excuse given by the Council.

A story of survival: Olga lost her family in the concentration camps

Olga Horak is 94 and a half. She is specific about the half-year, because at her age, it matters, and all those years are a testament to her great achievement: survival. Olga Horak, a 94-year-old Holocaust survivor. Credit:Steven Saphore Mrs Horak is a Czechoslovakin-born Jewish Holocaust survivor, or as she puts it, a “graduate of the Holocaust”. She was interned in five camps during World War II, including Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, from which she was liberated in 1945 at the age of 18. She lost her entire family in the camps, including her mother, most tragically, on the day of their liberation.

Sydney Jewish Museum immortalises Holocaust survivor stories using cutting edge 3D technology

Sydney Jewish Museum immortalises Holocaust survivor stories using cutting edge 3D technology FriFriday 22 JanJanuary 2021 at 7:56pm Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. Watch 5 m In an Australian first, the Sydney Jewish Museum is using cutting-edge technology to capture the stories of Holocaust survivors to preserve them for future generations. (Ella Archibald-Binge) Print text only Cancel Olga Horak delicately handles a black and white striped blanket, which, at first glance, appears unextraordinary until she explains its origins. Key points: The Sydney Jewish Museum is using 3D technology to create interactive biographies with six Holocaust survivors

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