King Charles to Visit Auschwitz for 80th Anniversary of Liberation
King Charles has accepted an invitation to visit the Auschwitz concentration camp in January 2025, joining representatives from 20 different countries to mark the 80th anniversary of the camp’s liberation.
The king, who visited Auschwitz in 2020 when still Prince of Wales, has had a long-standing connection with survivors, several of whom, though now frail, are expected to attend the commemoration ceremonies. During his 2020 visit, he warned that “hatred and intolerance still lurk in the human heart.”
Though not in the best of health himself — he is still continuing a weekly treatment for cancer — King Charles has vocally opposed antisemitism and was determined to attend the historic occasion on January 27. It will almost certainly be the last such event attended by Holocaust survivors.
Organizers say he will be the first British monarch to visit Auschwitz. His mother, the late Queen Elizabeth, made her final foreign trip in 2005 when she visited Bergen-Belsen. The king has had a long-standing commitment to the Jewish community, particularly in Poland where his close connection to World Jewish Relief led to the opening of a Jewish community centre in Krakow.
He remains a patron of the charity. The UK government has announced additional funding for the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, of which the king is also a patron, to support the anniversary. (JN/ VFI News)
“Dear God, we pray for the health of King Charles and we ask that You heal his cancer and any other health issues he might be dealing with. We thank You for devoted allies like him and we are grateful to see his commitment to fight antisemitism and support Holocaust survivors. We continue to pray that the horrors of the Holocaust will never be repeated on the Jewish people or any world population. In Yeshua’s name we pray, amen.”