Shropshire Star

Kate to attend Holocaust Memorial Day event with William in London

The Prince and Princess of Wales will pay their respects at a service on the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on Monday.

By contributor By Harry Stedman, PA
Published
Princess of Wales at The Royal Marsden hospital
Kate visited The Royal Marsden hospital earlier this month (Chris Jackson/PA)

The Princess of Wales will join her husband to attend official commemorations to mark Holocaust Memorial Day.

William and Kate will pay their respects at a service in London on the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on Monday.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is also expected to attend and speak at the service, along with faith and civic leaders and survivors of the Holocaust and more recent genocides.

The annual event remembers the six million Jewish people murdered during the Holocaust, as well as the millions of other people killed under Nazi persecution and those who died in subsequent genocides.

William and Kate at Holocaust Memorial Day 2020
William and Kate will attend the remembrance service together, as they did in 2020 (Chris Jackson/PA Archive)

Both the prince and princess, then the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, attended a service marking the 75th anniversary in 2020, while Kate also took photographs of Holocaust survivors at Kensington Palace.

Kate, 43, made a surprise return to public appearances earlier this month when she gave thanks to medical teams at The Royal Marsden hospital in London, where she received her cancer treatment.

She later said it was “a relief to now be in remission” and that she was “looking forward to a fulfilling year ahead”.

The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust has encouraged people across the UK to join in a ‘national moment’ by lighting candles and placing them in their windows at 8pm on Monday.

Famous buildings and landmarks will also be lit purple as a show of solidarity.

The King has travelled to Auschwitz in Poland for the anniversary, where he will join survivors and other dignitaries at the site of the former concentration camp for his own service.

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