Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Warning over child sexting

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SIMPLE artefacts – a striped uniform, a shoe and some eating utensils – will help to encapsulat­e the horror of the Holocaust when they go on display at a new exhibition centre in Huddersfie­ld.

The Holocaust Exhibition and Learning Centre opens at the University of Huddersfie­ld in September with funding including more than £600,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

A leading role in its creation has been played by the Leeds-based Holocaust Survivors’ Friendship Associatio­n (HSFA), chaired by Lilian Black.

She recently returned from a visit to the memorial sites of the former concentrat­ion camps of Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora where she negotiated the loan of objects that illustrate the daily life of victims.

The items consist of drinking and eating bowls, spoons and a shoe, plus the uniform of a Polish prisoner named Mieczyslaw Kowalski. The Internatio­nal Tracing Service, which documents victims of the Nazis, was able to provide informatio­n about him.

Born in September 1928, Mieczyslaw was imprisoned in October 1944, at Breslau, aged 16, then sent to Gross-Rosen concentrat­ion camp. He was transferre­d to Mittelbau-Dora on February 12, 1945, as a forced labourer. He spent time in the hospital prison suffering from frostbite and was liberated by American troops in April 1945, before being repatriate­d to Poland by The Red Cross.

Lilian’s late father Eugene, a Czech-born Jew who survived the Holocaust to build a new life in England, was a slave labourer at Mittelbau-Dora where the Nazis constructe­d the V2 rocket. He was sent to the camp after undergoing a selection process at AuschwitzB­irkenau and is likely to have encountere­d Mieczyslaw Kowalski.

Emma King, director of the Holocaust Heritage and Learning Centre, said: “It is amazing to have such precious and original artefacts from the original camp settings to be able to display for people to be able to actually see the reality of daily life in the camps.

“It was a deeply moving and emotional experience to see and touch these items which belonged to a human being who survived and donated them to our German partners.

“They add and enrich the documentar­y evidence we already have, of testimonie­s, photograph­s and recorded minutes of meetings planning the Final Solution.”

The artefacts were handed over to the centre at a special ceremony attended by many of the people closely involved in the project, including one of its patrons, Yorkshire businessma­n and philanthro­pist Jonathan Straight.

University deputy vicechance­llor Prof Tim Thornton, who also attended, said: “It is our great honour to be able to work with the HSFA and its partners to bring this image – could contribute to the rise.

It was also revealed that just one in six child sexual abuse complaints in West Yorkshire ends up in court.

That’s according to analysis of Home Office figures released to the Examiner.

West Yorkshire Police said: “Sexual offences are taken very seriously by West Yorkshire Police.

“Specially trained officers are responsibl­e for the investigat­ion of these offences and are situated within both District Safeguardi­ng Units and Protective Services (Crime), a specialist department which deals with complex investigat­ions.

“Sexting is an increasing­ly common activity amongst young people new developmen­t to the University of Huddersfie­ld for future teaching, learning and research. This is just the start of what I believe to be one of the most important partnershi­ps for the future.”

Lilian said: “It has been a long journey in more ways than one as my father and other survivors were who may not realise what they are doing is illegal and that it may be potentiall­y harmful to them in the future.”

When people talk about sexting, they usually mean sending and receiving: Naked pictures or ‘nudes’ ‘Underwear shots’ Sexual or ‘dirty pics’ Rude text messages or videos. They can be sent to or from a friend, boyfriend, girlfriend or someone you’ve met online.

For further informatio­n contact Childline onwww.childline.org.uk/ info-advice/bullying-abuse-safety/ online-mobile-safety/sexting/ prisoners at these former concentrat­ion camps, but it is critical that we preserve our legacy and make it accessible for future generation­s to know how thin the layers of civilisati­on are.

“I cannot speak highly enough about our German partners in Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora for Pictured with the concentrat­ion camp prisoners’ uniform are Emma King (left), director of the Holocaust Heritage and Learning Centre, with Lilian Black, chairman of the Holocaust Survivors’ Friendship Associatio­n entrusting us with such precious items.” In addition to its Heritage Lottery Fund Award, the Holocaust Heritage and Learning Centre has received support from the university, the Pears Foundation, the Toni Schiff Memorial Fund, the Associatio­n of Jewish Refugees and a number of firms and patrons.

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