Three generations of the family of a Holocaust survivor will visit an Oxfordshire museum on the eve of the anniversary of the liberation of the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.
Descendants of Naomi Warren will fly into the UK from America to visit the Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum on April 13.
This is to mark the anniversary of Bergen Belsen's liberation on April 15, 1945.
Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum has an exhibition in Ms Warren's honour, entitled Naomi and Arthur: Letters from Liberation, which opened on Holocaust Memorial Day, January 27.
The exhibition narrates the story of how Arthur Tyler, a soldier with the Oxfordshire Yeomanry stationed at Bergen-Belsen, helped Naomi Kaplan, a camp survivor, to reconnect with her family.
Their meeting paved the way for a bright future.
Once in the USA, Ms Warren became a successful businesswoman, ran an international meat import and processing company, and was a mother to three children.
Her legacy lives on through her family and the Warren Fellowship for Future Teachers, an educational programme established by her children as a tribute to their mother.
Ursula Corcoran, director of the Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum, said: "Letters from Liberation is a war-time story with a difference – focusing on an act of kindness, and the courage of survival.
"The story is also a powerful reminder that we need to be vigilant against Holocaust denial and the rise of authoritarian rule."
For more information about Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum, visit the website via www.sofo.org.uk/.
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