Versuchen GOLD - Frei
An Abomination' Bergen-Belsen Survivor Recounts Holocaust Horror
The Guardian
|April 16, 2025
For a long time, Lola Hassid Angel did not want to talk about the horrors of her childhood. Her experiences of the second world war had not been light: by the age of eight, the Holocaust survivor had "reached adulthood," seen things she should never have seen, heard sounds she should never have heard, and been confronted by terrors she could neither forgive nor forget.
Which is why the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen by British forces on 15 April 1945 is as much a cause for joy as for the horror to come flooding back.
"But it's also different," Angel, now 88 and a great-great-grandmother, said over tea in her apartment in Athens. "Now I want to tell the whole world what happened. And that's because I want all these men who lead us to know what war really looks like. The Germans had a zeal for death; they had turned it into a science."
Quick to smile, gravel-voiced and diminutive, Angel is among the last of Greece's dwindling Jewish community to have survived Bergen-Belsen, the concentration camp complex in northern Germany. "What happened there was an abomination," Angel said. "An abomination that historians will one day refer to as a dark page but which we, as the last survivors, are duty-bound to describe."
Retreating Nazi forces agreed to hand the camp over to the allies on 12 April. It was, by all accounts, a peaceful exchange until the 11th Armoured Division of the British army, backed by the 63rd Anti-tank Regiment, arrived at the complex's barbed wire confines on 15 April.
Witnesses said nothing could have prepared them for what they found. The stench of death was everywhere, in the corpses piled high, some green, almost all emaciated, lying by the thousands in various stages of decomposition. Typhus had spread. So, too, had dysentery and starvation. Of the 60,000 people locked inside, more than 14,000 would die within weeks of liberation because freedom had simply come too late. More than 70,000 people were killed in the camp, most Jewish but also including 20,000 Soviet prisoners of war and other Nazi targets such as Roma and gay men.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 16, 2025-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Guardian
The Guardian
'Heroic' rail worker in fight for life after tackling train knife attacker
Single suspect held over stabbings as 11 victims are treated in hospital
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
World Cup wave leaves Saracens riding high in the sun
The stars came out to dazzle a record Saracens crowd in a 47-10 derby win for the home side against Harlequins
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Goal machine Haaland's latest double fires City up to second
But Guardiola still criticises refereeing standards at Etihad by saying: They're brave here’
1 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Southampton sack Still as club slide into the danger zone
Southampton have sacked Will Still after the club dropped closer to the Championship relegation zone.
1 min
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
UK workforce risks loss of extra 600,000 people to poor health - study
An extra 600,000 people will leave the workforce in the next decade because of long-term health conditions unless there is \"a fundamental shift\" in how employers help maintain staff well-being, a report says.
1 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Nuno hails fans as Hammers hit back in rare win
Nuno Espírito Santo said that his West Ham team had given their fans “something small” to cling on to with a first victory of his tenure and that he hoped a performance of grit, ability and, perhaps most importantly, belief would give them momentum in their fight against relegation.
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Cycles of power The young bike fans reclaiming the streets of Johannesburg
On a hot Saturday spring morning, Karabo Mashele urged a group of female cyclists up the hills of a plush Johannesburg suburb.
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Shafali and Deepti the home heroes as India make history
Wolvaardt hits another hundred but South Africa pay for dropped catches in final
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Reeves is warned not to cut VAT on electricity bills
Proposals being considered by Rachel Reeves to cut tax on electricity bills will backfire, experts have warned, resulting in a giveaway to richer homeowners and undermining the UK's climate commitments.
3 mins
November 03, 2025
The Guardian
Wolves eye O'Neil and Edwards after Pereira exits
Wolves could turn to their former head coach Gary O'Neil after sacking Vítor Pereira, with Middlesbrough's Rob Edwards another leading candidate.
2 mins
November 03, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
