75 years after death camp prisoners freed, photo project featuring 75 people who survived the Holocaust to open at Ruhr Museum in the presence of German Chancellor Merkel

Son of former Auschwitz prisoner who was not among 30 given tickets to event says forum should have been honoring survivors first and foremost

Moshe Peter Loth presented himself as a child Holocaust survivor, but may have invented his story

40 years after his death, Helmut Kleinicke, who kept mum about sheltering and helping Jewish laborers avoid deportation to death camps, designated as Righteous Among the Nations

When the Allies liberated the first camps, the ghastly images of what they found were not widely shared. The discovery of Ohrdruf marked a turning point

Heart-wrenching testimonies from survivors living in Israel, as the Jewish state prepares to host world leaders on the 75th anniversary of the death camp's liberation

Budapest resident Agnes Keleti is a winner of the Israel Prize as well as 10 medals in gymnastics — including 5 golds — at the 1952 Helsinki Games and 1956 Melbourne Games

Documents show Moshe Peter Loth, who publicly forgave accused Nazi guard in November, was not born in Stutthof camp as he claims, was born to Christian family

On exhibit in London through January 25, the works of Josef Herman, whose family perished in the Warsaw Ghetto, focus on the old country before shifting to the British proletariat

New book details how unmarried women were tricked into showing up for deportation, and follows the few who managed against all odds to survive three long years of hell on earth

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