By Adam Ross
Aish Hatorah Resources 

Prince Philip's mother saved Jews during the Holocaust

 

April 23, 2021

Princess Alice of Battenberg

Husband to the Queen for 74 years, Prince Philip was deeply proud of his mother, Princess Alice of Greece, who was recognized as one of the Righteous Among the Nations.

"I suspect that it never occurred to her that her action was in any way special," Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, once said about his mother who rescued a family of Jews during the Shoah. "She was a person with deep religious faith and she would have considered it to be a totally human action to fellow human beings in distress."

Prince Philip died on Friday, aged 99, he had been married to Queen Elizabeth for 74 years.

Born at Windsor Castle in 1885, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, Princess Alice was diagnosed with deafness at a young age and by the age of eight had learned to lip read fluently. Known for her sensitivity to others, enhanced by her own disability, she was married to Prince Andrew of the Greek-Danish Royal family. During the Second World War, the southern part of Greece was occupied from 1941, with the north also occupied from 1943.

The Nazis began deporting Jews from the south to death camps in Poland in 1942. Haimaki Cohen had been a Jewish member of the Greek parliament and was known to Princess Alice. He died in 1943, having fled to the north of the country. His wife Rachel and her family were hidden by three sisters on the outskirts of Athens, but had to flee after a short period of time.

Princess Alice who had been assisting the Swedish and Swiss Red Cross to help care for refugees, heard of the Cohen's plight and opened the doors of the palace to them. Three of Rachel's grown up children succeeded in escaping Greece, reaching Egypt via Turkey, while Princess Alice sheltered Rachel Cohen and her daughter Tilde in a third-floor apartment in the palace.

The Cohens remained in the palace for 13 months, with the princess regularly visiting and talking at length with Rachel, also assigning the family two Greeks who helped the family keep in contact with the outside world. It was this communication which helped Rachel discover that one of her sons had not been able to reach Egypt. He was also brought to the palace joining his mother and sister.

Helping a Jewish family came with great risks, especially for Princess Alice, since three of her four daughters had married German princes, who were serving as SS officers. Suspicions of her loyalty were rife, since Philip, her only son had much earlier enlisted to the British Royal navy at aged 18 where he served throughout the war with distinction.

At one point Gestapo officials visited her Athens home and were suspicious of who was living upstairs. The princess played up her deafness, pretending not to comprehend their questioning and claiming simply that a nanny lived with her.

The vast majority of Greece's approximately 80,000 Jews were murdered in the Holocaust.

Princess Alice established a convent in Athens dedicated to helping the needy. Following a coup in the country, she returned to Great Britain to be near to her son and his wife the Queen, whom she lived with at Buckingham Palace, dedicating herself solely to helping the disadvantaged and needy.

Shortly before her death in 1969, Alice requested to be buried in Jerusalem on the Mount of Olives. She died without any possessions having given everything she owned away. Nineteen years later, in 1988, in accordance with her wishes, her body was flown to Israel and placed in the crypt in the Garden of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives.

In 1990, the Cohen family formally applied for Princess Alice to be recognized as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, and in 1994 Prince Philip made a private visit to Israel to plant a tree in his mother's memory. As a guest of the President of Israel, Ezer Weitzman, he visited his mother's tomb and spent time speaking with the Cohen family and their descendants who owed their lives to his mother's kindness.

Speaking at the ceremony Philip said his mother had acted purely out of faith and conscience. "For years, we did not know, and, as far as we know, she also never mentioned to anyone, that she had given refuge to the Cohen family."

Prince Philip also added his own recollection of Nazi anti-Semitism while studying at a boarding school as a 12-year-old boy, in the town of Salem in Southern Germany as Hitler rose to power. The school had been owned by one of his brothers-in-law.

"It was the custom of the school to appoint a senior boy to look after the new arrivals. I was unaware of it at the time, but it so happened that our 'Helper', as he was called, was of Jewish origin. One night he was over-powered in his bed and had all his hair cut off. You can imagine what an effect this had on us junior boys. Nothing could have given us a clearer indication of the meaning of persecution."

Phillip had played cricket for his school in England, and still owned his cricket cap, which he offered to the Jewish boy to cover his shame. "I was pleased to see that he wore it."

In 2018, Prince Philip's grandson, Prince William, currently second in line to the throne, visited Israel on the first official state visit, paying his respects at his great grandmother's tomb and also meeting Evy Cohen, a granddaughter of Rachel Cohen, along with her little cousin Philippe.

Evy Cohen said, "It was very moving, for all sides. Prince William was very proud to know that his great-grandmother had saved our whole family."

Philippe told the prince, "We all owe our existence to the courage of Princess Alice. Her attitude was extraordinary, and what she did was absolutely extraordinary. She was very courageous and risked her own life to take in a family in need."

Adam Ross, a frequent contributor to Aish.com, has recently returned to Israel having served as the campus rabbi at Leeds University for Aish UK. He entered the world of Jewish education following a background in media and news broadcasting. Since moving to Israel in 2005, Adam has taught at many post college programs in Israel. You can follow his weekly blog with thoughts and stories for the Shabbat table at www.athoughtforshabbat.wordpress.com.

 

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