Become a Member
TV

Antiques Roadshow special reveals tales of horror

This Sunday's Holocaust Memorial Day edition of the Antiques Roadshow will not offer valuations on the treasures shown. Each item serves as a tangible reminder of the Holocaust.

January 13, 2017 10:48
12610936-high_res-antiques-roadshow-holocaust-memorial-special

ByCharlotte Oliver, Charlotte Oliver

4 min read

At first sight, it was nothing special, an ordinary bag buried underneath piles of clothes in a cupboard.

But when Lady Zahava Kohn opened the sack, which she found in her late mother’s bedroom following her death 15 years ago, she was overwhelmed to find it filled with reams of papers, letters, cards, ration cards and notes collected during the Holocaust and hidden ever since.

Among the items were pieces of paper detailing her mother and father’s jobs and duties while held at the Westerbork transit camp in Holland, as well as the German concentration camp Bergen-Belsen, where they were imprisoned along with their daughter until its liberation in 1945.

Her mother had never spoken of her hoardings, nor of the Holocaust whatsoever. Indeed, it was her discovery of the bag that prompted Kohn to finally start speaking about her own experiences as an imprisoned child during the Second World War.