Jerusalem - The Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial and Museum staff regrets that Prince William aims to skip a visit to a tree planted to honor his great-grandmother who rescued Jews in Nazi-occupied Athens during his planned visit to the site on June 26.

Instead, he is expected to honor the memory of his great-grandmother – who was recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations in 1993 for saving the life of Jewish widow Rachel Cohen and the lives of two of her sons in Nazi-occupied Athens – by visiting her grave in Church of Mary Magdalene in Jerusalem.

“How is it possible that the prince is going to visit Yad Vashem and not visit the tree,” an anonymous source from Yad Vashem told The Jerusalem Post’s sister publication Ma’ariv. “Is it for fear of upsetting the Arabs?”

In a statement sent to the Post, a Yad Vashem spokesman said the museum was neither “shocked nor mad” William will skip visiting the tree, rather the museum “regrets” the visit “is not included as part of his tour.”

“Yad Vashem regrets that this element is not included as part of his tour. The Duke of Cambridge will tour Yad Vashem’s Holocaust History Museum, participate in a memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance, visit the Children’s Memorial and sign the Yad Vashem guest book. We hope that he will address the honorable connection between the history of the Holocaust and the courageous actions of his great-grandmother in his written remarks in the Yad Vashem guest book,” the museum said.

During his historical visit to the region, Prince William opted to meet a Holocaust survivor who, as a child, was given asylum in England because of the Kindertransport.

The UK accepted roughly ten thousand Jewish children from Germany, Poland and other central European countries. These children were often the only members of their extended families to survive the war.

Cohen’s late husband, Haimaki Cohen, served King George I of Greece – the father of Princess Alice – in 1913. The king offered Cohen his aid in anything he might wish as a reward for his service.Read more at JPost