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Karen Pollock

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Karen Pollock,

Karen Pollock

Opinion

Our debt to Britain over Belsen

April 11, 2014 10:39
2 min read

Almost 69 years ago today, Norman Turgel, a soldier in the British Army, met the woman whom he immediately knew he would marry. Just days later, they were engaged.

But Europe’s war was drawing to a close and he soon had to leave his new fiancée. In the months that passed without contact, his friend managed to get hold of a silk parachute, which a dressmaker turned into a wedding dress. Norman and Gena were married on October 7 1945.

While Norman and Gena’s whirlwind romance is like a fairytale, the setting for it was certainly not. Norman was one of the British soldiers who had liberated Gena from Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on April 15 1945. Gena had been living under Nazi occupation for six years, having survived the Krakow ghetto and Auschwitz-Birkenau. With the Allies closing in, Gena and her mother were sent on a death march to Bergen-Belsen.

The British liberation of Belsen almost certainly saved the lives of Gena and her mother. But for British soldiers like Norman, it was a shocking experience. Three days after he entered the camp, Norman woke up to find that he couldn’t move. He, and some of his colleagues, couldn’t walk. The doctor came and put pins in their legs but they couldn’t feel them. This lasted for 24 hours, and the doctors put it down to shock from the horrendous sights they had seen.