The News (New Glasgow)

Prince William visits Israel’s Holocaust memorial

-

Prince William began his visit to Israel on Tuesday with an emotional visit to Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial and a meeting with two survivors who escaped Nazi Germany for the safety of Britain.

Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev, who guided the Duke of Cambridge through the museum’s exhibition­s detailing Nazi Germany’s genocide of six million Jews during the Second World War, said the prince was visibly moved as he stopped to inquire about various elements of the Holocaust.

“The theme that repeated itself throughout the entire visit was his wondering of what kind of deep hatred could have driven people to commit such horrific acts,” Shalev told The Associated Press. “He kept saying: ‘How did they get to such a place?’ ... He really identified with the victims.”

The hour-and-a-half visit included a ceremony in which he placed a wreath on a concrete slab containing the ashes of Holocaust victims and a brief meeting with a pair of survivors from the Kindertran­sport, a rescue effort for some 12,000 children who were sent from Germany to Britain on the eve of the Second World War.

Henry Foner, who was fostered by a Jewish family in Swansea, Wales, and later served overseas for the British Army, said it was like a fairy tale for a refugee child like himself to meet a member of the royal family eight decades after the country rescued him.

“I’m very grateful to Britain because it saved my life, it’s as simple as that,” said Foner, 86. “It was as if he knew us, he knew the background and he made us feel so at home. It’s as if you had met a friend you hadn’t seen in a while.”

In signing the Yad Vashem guestbook, the prince called it a “profoundly moving experience” and said the Holocaust was “almost impossible to comprehend.”

He noted with pride that his great-grandmothe­r had been recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations, the highest honour Israel grants to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. Princess Alice hid three members of the Cohen family in her palace in Athens during the Nazi occupation of Greece in the Second World War. Thanks to her efforts, the Cohen family survived and today lives in France.

The princess died in 1969, and in 1988 her remains were brought to Jerusalem. Prince William plans to visit her gravesite later in the week as part of his tour of Jerusalem landmarks.

The prince is the first member of the British royal family to pay an official visit to Israel. Though the trip is being billed as non-political, the prince is meeting with Israeli and Palestinia­n leaders and visiting sites at the heart of the century-old conflict.

Three decades of British rule between the two world wars helped establish some of the fault lines of today’s Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, and Britain’s withdrawal in 1948 led to the eventual establishm­ent of Israel and Jordan, where he kicked off the five-day Mideast tour on Sunday.

For the 36-year-old William, second in line to the throne, it marks a high-profile visit that could burnish his internatio­nal credential­s.

After Yad Vashem he met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara, accompanie­d by descendant­s of the Cohen family Princess Alice had saved.

Later, President Reuven Rivlin told the prince about his childhood in Jerusalem living under the British mandate and asked him to deliver a “message of peace” to Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, whom he will meet later in the week.

The Palestinia­ns are also eager to welcome the prince, hoping his visit will give them a boost as they struggle with a Trump administra­tion they consider biased toward Israel.

The prince later visited east Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed in a move not internatio­nally recognized. Israel considers east Jerusalem, home to holy sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, as an inseparabl­e part of its capital.

 ?? AP POOL PHOTO ?? Britain’s Prince William lays a wreath during a memorial ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem on Tuesday.
AP POOL PHOTO Britain’s Prince William lays a wreath during a memorial ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada