Ottawa Citizen

PRINCE CHARLES PRAISES ‘AMAZING’ GRANDMOTHE­R

- HANNAH FURNESS

VIENNA • The Prince of Wales has told of his pride at his “amazing” grandmothe­r, who saved the lives of a Jewish family by sheltering them from the Nazis during the Second World War.

Prince Charles, who first visited his paternal grandmothe­r’s grave in Israel last year, told how he took flowers from his garden in Birkhall, Aberdeensh­ire, for the deeply moving visit.

He and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, spent the morning with Holocaust survivors at the Jewish Museum in Vienna during the final leg of their nine-day tour of Europe.

They included Auschwitz survivors Freddie Knoller, 95, and Gerda Frei, 80, and Harry Bibring, 91, who escaped on the Kindertran­sport after his family shop was destroyed in Kristallna­cht.

After asking for their stories over a cup of tea, the Prince told the group: “My father’s mother took in a Jewish family during the war and hid them.

“She was amazing, my grandmothe­r. She took them in during the Nazi occupation. She never told anybody, she didn’t tell her family for many years.

“She’s buried in Jerusalem. In September last year I went to the funeral of president (Shimon) Peres and finally got to see her grave.”

Princess Alice of Battenberg, a great-granddaugh­ter of Queen Victoria and mother of the Duke of Edinburgh, lived opposite the Gestapo headquarte­rs in Athens.

In September 1943, she agreed to take in the widow and two of the five children of Haimaki Cohen, who had helped the Greek royal family to shelter from flooding decades before, a moral debt the royals wanted one day to repay.

She hid Rachel Cohen and children Michel and Tilde in her palace until the Nazis withdrew in October 1944, refusing to give them away when threatened with having her home searched.

During that time, the Nazis sent the vast majority of Greece’s Jewish community to concentrat­ion camps.

Princess Alice was later recognized by the country’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial as Righteous Among the Nations, and was posthumous­ly awarded Britain’s Hero of the Holocaust medal.

Princess Alice’s remains are buried at the church of St. Mary Magdalene, above the Garden of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives.

Originally buried at Windsor Castle, she was reinterred in Jerusalem in 1988, but it was not until 1994 that the Duke of Edinburgh visited his mother’s grave when he travelled to Israel for a ceremony honouring her role in the war years.

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