On Holocaust Remembrance Day, Prince Charles participated in an exhibition of some of the UK’s surviving photographs of Holocaust survivors.
The artworks, commissioned by the Prince of Wales, were unveiled on January 27 at the Queen’s Gallery in London, where Prince Charles and the Princess of Cornwall met people in the photo as well as the artists.
Survivors shared their experiences with the royal family, even 98-year-old Lily Ebert showed the would-be king a tattoo in a concentration camp.
Showing seven men and women who survived the horrors of Nazism, this series of photographs will be part of the royal collection, providing powerful evidence of the extraordinary courage of the survivors and living memorials to the six million victims lost in one of the darkest periods in history. euronews
These photos represent over seven adorable individuals. They commemorate the six million innocent men, women and children whose stories will never be told, and whose portraits will never be painted, wrote Prince in the foreword to the exhibition, who is also a patron of the Holocaust Remembrance Day Foundation.
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The exhibition will be open until February 13, 2022 as part of the admission ticket to the current exhibition, Masterpieces of Buckingham Palace, and from March 17 to June 6, 2022, visitors will be able to admire the artwork at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh.