Become a Member
Community

Student ambassadors of Holocaust education are the ‘candle of hope in the darkness’

Hundreds of students attended a conference hosted by the Holocaust Educational Trust

July 1, 2025 12:13
The Holocaust Educational Trust Ambassador Conference 2025 (Photo: HET)
The Holocaust Educational Trust Ambassador Conference 2025 (Photo: HET)
4 min read

Born weighing just three pounds, Eva Clarke survived Mauthausen concentration camp as a baby. Her mother, Anka Nathanová weighed just 35 kilograms when she went into labour. Eva describes how the Nazis would have seen her mother as a “pregnant skeleton”. Her starved physique allowed her to hide her pregnancy – one of many miracles which led to Eva and her mother’s survival.

Holocaust survivor Eva was in conversation with author Wendy Holden at the annual Ambassador Conference of the Holocaust Educational Trust (HET), in central London on Monday. Founded in 1988, the HET arranges visits to schools by Holocaust survivors, designating every student who takes part in the Trust’s Lessons from Auschwitz project, as an ambassador.

Eva tells the story of how her father, Bernd Nathan fled Germany to Czechoslovakia as he “thought it was far enough (away) to be safe”. That proved to be wishful thinking. As an architect, Bernd was forced to build nightclubs and restaurants for the Nazis. One of the restaurants was the place where he met his wife, Anka.

Holocaust survivor Eva Clarke BEM being interviewed by author Wendy Holden (Photo: HET)Holocaust survivor Eva Clarke BEM being interviewed by author Wendy Holden (Photo: HET)[Missing Credit]

In November 1941, Bernd was one of the first people to be sent to Theresienstadt, where he was commanded to help set it up. Anka was later sent there, and during the three years they were both in the camp, Anka became pregnant. The Nazis viewed this “crime” of bringing Jewish life into the world as worthy of death, but despite this, Anka gave birth to a son. However, he survived for only two months.