
German Holocaust survivor and witness-bearer Margot Friedlaender dies at 103
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Friedlaender's death "fills me with deep sadness".
"She gave our country the gift of reconciliation, despite everything that the Germans did to her as a young woman," he said. "We cannot be grateful enough" for Friedlaender's efforts.
Friedlaender was born in Berlin into a Jewish family of button makers and trained as a fashion illustrator.
During the Holocaust she was sent to the Theresienstadt camp in what is now the Czech Republic.
While she and her husband Adolf survived and later emigrated to the United States, the rest of her immediate family perished in Auschwitz.
After her husband's death she began taking a memoir-writing class and worked on a documentary about her experiences.
She went back to Germany for the first time in 2003, and moved permanently to Berlin at the age of 88.
Her tireless efforts in keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive, particularly by sharing her experiences with younger people, won her plaudits in Germany and beyond.
Germany's new Chancellor Friedrich Merz joined those paying tribute on Friday, saying Friedlaender had "entrusted us with her story".
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"It is our task and our duty to carry it forward," he said.
Steinmeier had been due to award Friedlaender Germany's highest civilian honour at a ceremony earlier Friday, which was abruptly cancelled.
"Until the last, she urged us to defend democracy -- remembering alone is not enough," her foundation said.
Her last public appearance was at a ceremony this week to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II at Berlin's city hall, where she repeated what became her mantra.
"Be human! That is what I ask you to do: be human!" she said.

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DW
2 hours ago
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To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Outside of Europe, Saudi Arabia and Qatar both have track records as international negotiators and neither are members of the ICC. Officials from Ukraine, the US and Russia separately held talks in the Saudi city of Jeddah earlier this year, after which Washington agreed to share intelligence with Kyiv again. Saudi Arabia's neighbor Qatar has also mediated talks which led to Russia and Ukraine agreeing to return several children. In the past, the EU has pushed Gulf states to be more critical of Moscow, crack down on sanctions evasion, and offer more support to Ukraine.


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