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Opinion

VE Day stands for victory over evil but the fight against hatred still rages

As we remember and celebrate those who gave their lives for our freedom, we must use their experience to take action against the bigotry, extremism and dehumanisation

May 8, 2025 11:15
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(L-R) Dov Forman, Mervyn Kersh and Susan Pollack
3 min read

Today marks the 80th anniversary of VE Day – the day the Second World War ended in Europe, when Britain and its allies defeated Nazi Germany, and millions across Britain and the world poured into the streets to celebrate.

But for some, people like my great-grandmother, Lily Ebert, a survivor of Auschwitz who was liberated by American forces while on a death march in April 1945, it was not only a moment of joy and relief. It was also a moment of profound reckoning.

Fred Weider, great-grandfather of Dov FormanFred Weider, great-grandfather of Dov Forman[Missing Credit]

For the survivors of the Holocaust, for the bereaved families of the hundreds of thousands of British soldiers who fell fighting for freedom, and for those whose homes had been destroyed in the Blitz, VE Day marked both an ending and a beginning. The nightmare of a great war and genocide in Europe had ended. But for people like my great-grandmother, it was also the beginning of the struggle to rebuild a life from the ashes, with no possessions, no home, and with hundreds of family members gone forever.

Just weeks before VE Day, British troops had liberated Bergen-Belsen. Yet even after liberation, more than 13,000 people died in the following months from disease and starvation.