For 40 years Auschwitz survivor Mindu Hornick was unable to talk about the horrors she had seen when she was a prisoner in a Nazi death camp.
She was just 12 when she, her sister, her mother, and her two younger brothers were herded onto the cattle trains that would take them from their native Czechoslovakia to Poland.
For years they had been subjected to the brutality of Hitler's troops and in 1943 they joined millions of other Jews at the concentration camps that would horrify the world when they were discovered.
Mindu, now 90, explained: "My father was taken away to join the German Army. They were given no uniform, just an armband with the Star of David, and they had to dig trenches. "Two years later the Jewish community was taken to
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