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Auschwitz survivor went through five camps
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By Heather Morris
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1923 - 2021
The extraordinary Lotte Weiss was one of the first Jewish prisoners of Auschwitz. In March 1942, at the age of 18, she was forcibly transported by cattle wagon to Auschwitz, along with her two older sisters.
Her number 2065 – indelibly embedded on her left arm by the tattooist of Auschwitz, Lale Sokolov – bore a lasting testament to her early internment at Auschwitz.
Auschwitz survivor Lotte Weiss shows her tattoo number in 2015, aged 91.
Credit:Fairfax
Through a mix of luck and her sheer determination to survive, Lotte emerged from Auschwitz to find herself alone in the world, a previously close and happy family life destroyed, her hopes and dreams shattered.
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Ukrainian ambassador: We need negotiations on returning Crimea to Ukraine
Ukraine s ambassador to Germany calls for an international procedure to restore the annexed peninsula to Ukraine. Dr. Andrij Melnyk, LL.M., 16.3.2021 - 11:21 Uhr
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Photo: Pavlo SlobdodnychenkoAndriy Melnyk, Ukrainian ambassador to Germany.
Seven years ago, President Putin launched a military occupation of the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea and arbitrarily annexed it to Russia.
When the Kremlin overlord forcefully shifted state borders, it was the most serious violation of international law in Europe since the end of the Second World War.
Neither the German government nor the majority of UN member states have acknowledged this criminal annexation, as Chancellor Merkel aptly called it. This is a clear signal which we Ukrainians appreciate.
Lotte was one of the first Jewish prisoners of Auschwitz.
At the age of 18, she was forcibly transported by cattle car to Auschwitz in March 1942, along with her two older sisters.
Her number, 2065 – indelibly embedded on her left arm by the tattooist of Auschwitz, Lale Sokolov – bore a lasting testament to her early internment at the death camp.
Miraculously, through a mix of luck and her sheer determination to survive, Lotte emerged from Auschwitz to find herself all alone in the world, a previously close and happy family life destroyed, her hopes and dreams shattered.
It is truly an amazing feature of Lotte Weiss that she was able to discuss a subject as painful as the Holocaust and her personal family tragedy, and leave everyone coming away feeling full of hope, purpose and believing in the goodness of life and people.