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Otto Deutsch, Holocaust survivor, dies aged 88

Born in Vienna, Kristallnacht was the defining memory of Mr Deutsch’s childhood

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Holocaust organisations have paid tribute to Otto Deutsch, a prominent Shoah educator who came to Britain on the Kindertransport, and died this week, aged 88.

Born in Vienna, Kristallnacht was the defining memory of Mr Deutsch’s childhood. On that night, a group of Nazis broke into the family’s home, led by one of his father’s best friends. His father was dragged out of bed and arrested. Otto never saw him again.

Speaking at the main UK Holocaust Memorial Day ceremony in 2015, Mr Deutsch recalled: “What shook me most of all is that they were led by the very same man I called uncle.”

He spoke no English when he arrived in the UK, where a Catholic family near Newcastle took him in. Post-war, he learned that his parents and sister had been killed.

Mr Deutsch carved out a career as a London tour guide and later settled in Southend, where he became an active member of the Jewish community.

He dedicated many years of his life to speaking to school and other groups about his experiences. Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said he detailed “his safe passage to Britain on the Kindertransport, a journey which saved his him from the horrors of the Holocaust but meant that he never saw his parents again.”

At the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, Olivia Marks-Woldman remembered him as “a remarkable man who selflessly shared his experiences.” He said of his father at the 2015 HMD ceremony: “I miss him now as I did then.”

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