Gulf News

Enormously indebted to British people

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Britain’s Prince William met two men who survived the Nazi genocide thanks to British interventi­on.

Henry Foner, 86, and Paul Alexander, 80, were among thousands of Jewish children taken in by Britain as part of the 1930s “Kindertran­sport” from a continenta­l Europe that was falling to German conquest.

Alexander, freshly back from a bicycle ride that retraced his life-saving voyage as a toddler, said he was chosen to meet the prince as the youngest member of the Kindertran­sport.

“When I put my foot on English soil for the first time, it was like I had been reborn, because I left Nazi Germany and was received by the British people and I have an enormous debt of thanks to the British people,” Alexander told Reuters.

Originally from Leipzig, Alexander was reunited with his mother, who reached Britain the day before the Second World War erupted, and with his father, who survived Nazi internment at Buchenwald. Many other Kindertran­sport children were less lucky. Foner, whose original name was Heinz Lichtwitz, was taken from Berlin to the Welsh city of Swansea in 1939, two years after his mother committed suicide — a victim, he believes, of despair at the doom gathering around Europe’s Jews.

Foner received postcards from his father until the war cut off mail contact. In mid-1942, the elder Foner told his son in a final letter delivered through the Red Cross: “Our destiny is very uncertain.” Months later, he was murdered at Auschwitz.

The correspond­ence was included in Yad Vashem’s Kindertran­sport exhibit, as well as in Foner’s memoir, a copy of which he said he hoped to present to Prince William.

“I was a six-year-old refugee kid, and here I am giving a book I wrote, to honour my father, basically, to a member of the royal family,” he told Reuters. “It’s great honour for me to be able to say thank you, symbolical­ly, to the British people who saved my life.”

Later in the day, the prince will see Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin before going to Jaffa and Tel Aviv on the Mediterran­ean coast to meet young people participat­ing in a football-based youth programme.

 ?? Reuters ?? Holocaust survivors Paul Alexander (left) and Henry Foner after meeting with Britain’s Prince William yesterday.
Reuters Holocaust survivors Paul Alexander (left) and Henry Foner after meeting with Britain’s Prince William yesterday.

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