


In this undated handout photo released as part of a collaborative project between the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, Jewish News and the Royal Photographic Society to mark 75 years since the end of the Holocaust, Steven Frank BEM, pictured alongside his granddaughters Maggie and Trixie Fleet Photo by The Duchess of Cambridge/Royal Photographic Society via Getty Images Eva Clarke, one of the only people to be born in a concentration camp and survived beyond liberation, has given her birth certificate to be displayed in the gallery. The gallery includes over 2,000 different items. The Duchess then visited The Holocaust Gallery. It is a war with which everyone will have a personal connection.” The Second World War Galleries “display over 1,500 collection items that will bring to life a war which affected millions of people from around the world, from London to Russia, to New Zealand, to China and the Philippines. In an Alexander McQueen blouse that she first wore in 2012, a Catherine Walker coat and pair of trousers, and a poppy on her lapel, Catherine visited the museum to open The Second World War Galleries and The Holocaust Galleries. She was at the museum to open two different galleries, one which included some of her own photographs. On Wednesday, 10 November, ahead of Remembrance Sunday, The Duchess of Cambridge visited the Imperial War Museum in London.
