The Jewish Chronicle

Portraits of Holocaust survivors to be put on display at Buckingham Palace

- BY ROSA DOHERTY

VPORTRAITS OF seven Holocaust survivors commission­ed by the Prince of Wales will go on display at Buckingham Palace to mark Holocaust Memorial Day later this month.

The process of creating the paintings was recorded for a BBC documentar­y, Survivors: Portraits of the Holocaust. The programme, which also features interviews with the survivors, will be broadcast on Holocaust Memorial Day, Friday 27 January. The exhibition will open the same day in the Queen’s Gallery at the palace.

The Prince of Wales, who is a patron of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, said: “As the number of Holocaust survivors sadly, but inevitably, declines, my abiding hope is that this special collection will act as a further guiding light for our society, reminding us not only of history’s darkest days, but of humanity’s interconne­ctedness as we strive to create a better world for our children, grandchild­ren and generation­s as yet unborn; one where hope is victorious over despair and love triumphs over hate.”

Each survivor was painted by a different artist. Manfred Goldberg, for example, who was deported by train from Germany to the Riga Ghetto in Latvia in December 1941, was painted by Clara Drummond.

Mr Goldberg was born on 21 April 1930 in Kassel in central Germany into an Orthodox Jewish family. His father managed to escape to Britain in August 1939, just days before the war began, but the rest of the family were unable to join him.

The survivor has described the lack of food in the ghetto and use of slave labour and constant fear.

During his time there Nazis and their Latvian collaborat­ors regularly selected inmates for mass shootings in forests on the edge of the city.

Extraordin­arily, the 91-year-old remembers celebratin­g his Bar Mitzvah in March 1943. Mr Goldberg told the JC: “When I arrived in this country, a traumatise­d teenage survivor of the Holocaust, I did not dream that I would ever connect with royalty.

“I feel honoured beyond words to have been chosen to take part in this remarkable contributi­on towards ensuring commemorat­ion of the Holocaust, and bless His Royal Highness Prince Charles for initiating this project.”

Helen Aronson was painted by Paul Benney. Ms Aronson was 12 when the German army arrived at her home. She was one of around only 750 people to be liberated from the Łódz Ghetto, out of 250,000 people sent there.

Lily Ebert, who recently celebrated her 98th birthday, was 14 when the Nazis deported her from her Hungarian hometown to Auschwitz.

She has been painted by Ishbel Myerscough.

Other survivors include Arek Hersh, who was painted by Massimilia­no Pironti — one of four artists shortliste­d in 2019 for the art world’s most prestigiou­s portrait prize, the BP Portrait Award, for a painting of his 95-yearold grandmothe­r as “an example of strength, dignity and authority” .

Auschwitz survivor Anita LaskerWall­fisch was painted by Peter Kuhfeld, who was previously commission­ed by the Prince of Wales in 2012 to paint the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, while Rachel Levy has been painted by Stuart Pearson Wright and Zigi Shipper painted by Jenny Saville.

As part of the documentar­y, viewers will hear the powerful testimonie­s of the survivors who have all made their lives in Britain.

Karen Pollock CBE, chief executive, of the Holocaust Educationa­l Trust said: “These Holocaust survivors endured the very worst.

“They were rounded up into ghettos, sent to concentrat­ion camps and enslaved as forced labourers.

“To survive the concentrat­ion and death camps and 77 years later see their portraits displayed in Buckingham Palace is very special indeed, and a poignant and fitting testament to their lasting contributi­on to this country. The Nazis intended there to be no Jews left in Europe — instead these survivors are honoured at the heart of British society.”

She added: “The Prince of Wales has long been a true supporter of Holocaust

education and remembranc­e, and we could not be more grateful and indebted to him for the work he continues to do to ensure that the Holocaust holds a central place in British history and memory.”

The Prince of Wales’ grandmothe­r, Princess Alice, protected a Jewish family during the Nazi occupation of Greece and is counted as one of the Righteous Among the Nations.

Charles has described her receiving the honour bestowed by Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial as a source of “immense pride” for him and the royal family.

The documentar­y will be shown on BBC World News over two episodes on the 12 and 19 February.

The seven portraits will become part of the Royal Collection and can be seen in the special display Seven Portraits: Surviving the Holocaust at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace between 27 January and 13 February.

The portraits will then go on display in the Palace of Holyroodho­use in Edinburgh between 17

March and 6 June.

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 ?? PHOTOS: BBC STUDIOS ?? Clara Drummond painting Manfred Goldberg (left). Above: The Auschwitz survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch
PHOTOS: BBC STUDIOS Clara Drummond painting Manfred Goldberg (left). Above: The Auschwitz survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch
 ?? ?? The seven pictures will be exhibited in the Queen’s Gallery
The seven pictures will be exhibited in the Queen’s Gallery
 ?? ?? Commission: The Prince of Wales
Commission: The Prince of Wales

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