Calgary Herald

Queen meets survivors, liberators of Nazi camp

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Queen Elizabeth concluded her three-day state visit to Germany on Friday with a sombre visit to Bergen-Belsen, the first former Nazi concentrat­ion camp she has visited.

The Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, met with survivors and former British soldiers who were among those who liberated the camp where teenage diarist Anne Frank and her sister Margot died 70 years ago.

“I’m very happy that the Queen can do this for the British soldiers,” said Rudi Oppenheime­r, one of the Bergen-Belsen survivors who greeted the royals at the site in northern Germany, near Celle.

“They did so much. They never talked about it, they couldn’t talk about it. They didn’t tell their wives or their children, they were so horrified by what they saw. All the corpses,” said Oppenheime­r, who immigrated to Britain after the war.

Both the Queen, 89, and Philip, 94, supported the British war effort against the Nazis during the Second World War.

The Queen, then a princess, was moved out of Buckingham Palace at the height of the blitz for safety’s sake, retreating to Windsor. She later served in the Women’s Auxiliary Territoria­l Service and was trained as both a military truck driver and a mechanic. Prince Philip served throughout the war in the Royal Navy.

The Queen and Philip made state visits to Germany in 1965, 1978, 1992 and 2004, but this was the first time they visited the site of a former Nazi camp.

“The memory of the Holocaust remains such a fundamenta­l aspect of modern Jewish identity that the Queen’s journey to memorializ­e the victims will be viewed as tremendous­ly significan­t by Jewish communitie­s across the world,” said Ephraim Mirvis, the chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregati­ons of the Commonweal­th in Britain, who met with the Queen at the Bergen-Belsen ceremony.

The Queen and Philip were shown through parts of the former camp by the memorial’s director. They paused at a special memorial for Frank and her sister, who was born the same year as Elizabeth, before walking alone along a long path to the House of Silence, a modern structure set up as a place of reflection for visitors. The two then placed a wreath at a memorial to the camp’s victims.

They talked with survivors, liberators and schoolchil­dren on hand to greet them.

Oppenheime­r, who was 12 when Bergen-Belsen was liberated, said it was a great honour for him to be invited to the ceremony.

“For me it’s wonderful,” said Oppenheime­r, 83, who speaks on behalf of the Holocaust Educationa­l Trust “But it upsets me that neither of my parents know about it, or my uncle, he was always so proud that we are integrated into the English system. Imagine his little Rudi shaking hands with the Queen.”

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