 I think it's powerfully important that we keep telling these stories because as the next generation arrives on planet Earth and these stories are not told, there could be a tendency to forget. I was born in 1935 when the Nazis were already four years in power. I came to England on the Kinder Transport in 1939. I can remember being very shocked at the huge size of the boat. I remember being frightened that the boat would sink too many people and too much luggage. I experienced it as my being so bad that my parents didn't want me any longer. The truth is that genocide can happen anywhere, at any time to anyone. Unless we take the messages from the past, we won't be able to recognise the signs of genocide and we won't be able to stop it. History tells us that stronger communities, communities that don't create an other, communities that don't fracture into them and us are stronger communities and therefore these sorts of things are less likely to happen. The lessons of the Holocaust have not been learned. The fundamental lesson that all human beings are equal as human beings. We are a long way from accepting that. The important thing is to learn for a purpose, learn from genocide for a better future.