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ANTIQUES Roadshow specialist Mark Smith was moved to tears on Sunday night, along with fans at home, after a woman brought in memorabilia from her family’s time at a World War II concentration camp. 

The woman appeared on the show to discuss three small metal broaches that her family made while they were trapped in a camp during the Holocaust. 

A family memory of the Holocaust was shown on Antiques Roadshow
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A family memory of the Holocaust was shown on Antiques RoadshowCredit: BBC

In an even more horrifying tale, she then revealed they were part of a ‘show camp’, which was used by Nazis as photo opportunities to show how well they looked after their prisoners. 

The three medallions - a watering can, a dog and a shield - all were made and belonged to her mother and grandmother from their days in the Theresienstadt Camp. 

“My mum was in the choir,” the woman explained, adding that one of the medals marked her mum’s 16th birthday. 

The three broaches were made while they were trapped in a concentration camp
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The three broaches were made while they were trapped in a concentration campCredit: BBC

“She was never a singer, but there was an amazing Czech composer who was captured there. He managed to get an underground choir going to rehearse every night and they managed to learn the entire Requiem. 

“When the Nazis realised that this was being done they thought ‘well let's showcase this, show them how well we treat these people’ and they performed a concert to The Red Cross and showed them off.” 

Family members, including her uncle and grandfather, were later taken to Auschwitz, where her uncle was killed three days before his 21st birthday. 

The woman revealed her mother and grandmother made the pieces during the Holocaust
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The woman revealed her mother and grandmother made the pieces during the HolocaustCredit: BBC

A choked up Mark then told her: “They're some of the darkest days in human history, and these three little things represent a hope and a fact that one day, things will be normal again.

“They're objects from the Holocaust, and I don't ever think that it's right to value them.”

Fan took to Twitter to share their thoughts on the harrowing tale behing the items.

"There is no level of hell, no level of punishment, no prison that is even 1-billionth of the suffering [done] to ordinary people," one user wrote.

The broaches were made to bring hope for the future
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The broaches were made to bring hope for the futureCredit: BBC

"Sat here crying into my tea FFS," a second wrote.

While a third chimed in: "Still can't get my ahead around how people can be so evil," along with a string of crying emojis

Antiques Roadshow airs Sundays at 7pm on BBC One.

 

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