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Holocaust museum opens at Belsen | Holocaust museum opens at Belsen |
(1 day later) | |
Germany has inaugurated a new museum at the site of the Nazi concentration camp where diarist Anne Frank died. | |
The new exhibition centre at Bergen-Belsen, in the north of Germany, highlights the fates of those who died at the camp during World War II. | |
Among the exhibits are the drawings and diaries of Jews imprisoned there, plus video statements by survivors. | Among the exhibits are the drawings and diaries of Jews imprisoned there, plus video statements by survivors. |
Some 100 survivors were at the ceremony at the camp, where an estimated 50,000 Jews perished during the Holocaust. | Some 100 survivors were at the ceremony at the camp, where an estimated 50,000 Jews perished during the Holocaust. |
Power of memory | Power of memory |
The new exhibition is part of an effort to reconstruct the lives of those sent to Bergen-Belsen during the Nazi occupation of Europe. | The new exhibition is part of an effort to reconstruct the lives of those sent to Bergen-Belsen during the Nazi occupation of Europe. |
It contains photographs, prisoners' records and objects donated by the survivors. | It contains photographs, prisoners' records and objects donated by the survivors. |
"Use of the new material makes it possible to faithfully recreate the history of the camp," said Christian Wulff, governor of the state of Lower Saxony. | |
"The genocide of Europe's Jews - a crime against humanity of unimaginable proportions - will now and forever keep its paramount place within the German memory," German Culture Minister Bernd Neumann said as he opened the museum. | "The genocide of Europe's Jews - a crime against humanity of unimaginable proportions - will now and forever keep its paramount place within the German memory," German Culture Minister Bernd Neumann said as he opened the museum. |
Liberated by Allied troops in 1945 and later razed, Bergen-Belsen began life as a prisoner of war camp. | Liberated by Allied troops in 1945 and later razed, Bergen-Belsen began life as a prisoner of war camp. |
From 1943 until the end of the war it was a concentration camp for Jews, gypsies and homosexuals, with an estimated 125,000 people held there. | From 1943 until the end of the war it was a concentration camp for Jews, gypsies and homosexuals, with an estimated 125,000 people held there. |
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