At London’s Jewish Museum, child survivors brought to the UK after World War II tell their stories 70 years later through a patchwork of quilts

LONDON – To mark the 70th anniversary of their parents’ and grandparents’ liberation from the Nazi concentration camps at the end of World War II, a group of families have stitched together – literally – their memories of the Holocaust through a vibrant patchwork of quilts.

The four “memory” quilts, currently on display at London’s Jewish Museum, each depict stories of survival, panel by panel, of “The Boys” – a group of 732 child survivors (which actually included 80 girls) from Eastern Europe.

According to the ’45 Aid Society, an organization formed by the survivors after the war, the UK government offered at the time to allow 1,000 Jewish orphans from the camps to settle in Great Britain, but sadly only the 732 could be found. Many stayed to rebuild their lives, but others went on to Israel, North America and Australia.... Read More: Times of Israel