 So, dear Lord Mayor Joseph, dear Mrs. Venzel, dear Mrs. Shepeche, dear Mrs. Erbrich, dear Rabbi Appel, dear Mr. Baker, dear Mr. Groman, dear colleagues, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you to all of you for being here today. We have come together to mark the International Holocaust Remembrance Day. It commemorates the victim of our history darkest hour. The ECB's main building occupies a historic site. Here, where we are all standing, more than 10,000 of Frankfurt Jewish population were deported from here. Only a few survived the horrors that awaited them. One of them is with us today. It was by no means a foregone conclusion that the European Central Bank would sanction the creation of a memorial site at the former Grossmarkt Halle, nor, indeed, that it would provide financial support. Today it is not longer enough simply to say, never again. Among the millions killed by the Nazi regime in concentration camps through forced labour or suffocated in the gas chambers of the death camp, Jews comprise the largest group of victims. Only few survived the killing machinery of Auschwitz, among them Eva Shepezi, who is here with us today. It is a special honour for me to be able to speak here today. My name is Eva Shepezi. I was born on September 29, 1932 in Budapest. I had a very happy childhood until my sixth year of age. Then, in 1938, the restrictions and discriminations began for us Jews.