The Jewish Chronicle

The unknown six

After languishin­g in a museum archive for decades the remains of a group of Auschwitz victims — including one child — are to be buried next week in an unpreceden­ted ceremony in Bushey

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

THE REMAINS of six unknown Shoah victims — including a child — which had been stored in the archives of the Imperial War Museum (IWM) for decades are to be buried next week after an extraordin­ary collaborat­ion between the museum, Auschwitz and the Chief Rabbi.

After a stocktakin­g of its Holocaust material last year, the museum decided that the mainly ash remains — which had been analysed by a pathologis­t at the English Heritage Centre for Archaeolog­y in 2005 — should be returned to the Jewish community.

The museum then contacted the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and Chief Rabbi for advice, and the United Synagogue offered to bury the victims in a service.

It is hoped mourners will come from across the world to pay their respects in what would be an “extraordin­ary act of chessed shel emet [true kindness].”

The Chief Rabbi’s office said: “These Kedoshim [holy souls] will now be afforded the dignity of a Jewish funeral, within the loving embrace of our community — something which was denied to them and so many others during the course of the Shoah.” The burial will take place at the United Synagogue’s Bushey New Cemetery at 11am on Sunday, January 20.

The IWM was given the remains in 1997, when the owner of a collection of items from Auschwitz-Birkenau offered them to the museum. Although the museum said it did not want the human remains, they were sent with the rest of the collection.

According to a spokesman, “the donor did not provide detailed informatio­n about how they obtained the remains but stated that the remains came from Auschwitz-Birkenau, along with other items from their collection, which Auschwitz-Birkenau have confirmed originate from that site.”

The IWM, which has a licence to

hold human tissue under the Human Tissue Act of 2004, said it had “cared for these remains since their arrival at the museum”.

But in consolidat­ing its Holocaustr­elated items ahead of the constructi­on of new galleries in 2021, it decided it was no longer appropriat­e for it to look after the remains.

In 2005, the English Heritage Centre for Archaeolog­y had told the museum that the remains included human bone fragments, along with other nonhuman bone fragments and constructi­on material from cremation ovens — and ash. These were identified as comprising five adults and a child.

The JC understand­s that although the burial service will be similar to that which is usually conducted, there will be no tahara (ritual purificati­on) of the bodies, given that the remains are mostly ash.

The remains will be gently placed in shrouds in a specially prepared coffin, with earth from Israel placed on top of the shrouds.

The nature of the remains means that cohanim will be able to be in the funeral hall for the service, prior to the transporta­tion of the coffin into the cemetery itself.

Michael Goldstein, president of the United Synagogue, called on the community to attend the funeral if they were able to do so. He said: “For everyone connected with the United Synagogue, and I’m quite sure the entire community, this can only be described as the ultimate act of kindness, chesed shel emet in Hebrew, because, as with all burials, nobody can be thanked for what you’ve done. We have the opportunit­y to do what was denied to our brothers and sisters during the Holocaust: to provide a dignified and appropriat­e Jewish burial.

“We must remember that although we have only the remains of a number of victims of the Shoah, each was a person in their own right, with a family and a life and a Jewish identity, with hopes and dreams just like each of us. One of them was a child. I will hug my own children especially tightly next Sunday.

“I thank all of my colleagues who will make this burial possible and know that each of them feels acutely the huge burden of responsibi­lity for what we are doing. We welcome all those who wish to attend to join us at the levaya to pay their respects.”

Melvyn Hartog, head of United Synagogue Burial, said: “Burying the remains of Holocaust victims is a unique and holy responsibi­lity to which the Chief Rabbi and Dayan Gelley [Rabbi of the Ohr Chodosh Synagogue in Golders Green] have given careful considerat­ion. Following the funeral service, and an address by the Chief Rabbi, the coffin will be taken to its final resting place where we will invite Holocaust survivors to lead us in filling the grave with earth.”

Olivia Marks-Woldman, chief executive of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said: “In the last weeks and months of their lives, these individual­s had their dignity and all respect stripped from them. We have an opportunit­y now, even after so many years, to give them a proper and dignified burial.”

The Chief Rabbi’s office praised the Imperial War Museum, saying Rabbi Mirvis was “grateful to IWM for the care and sensitivit­y they have shown”.

Remains will be placed in shrouds and a coffin

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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