Daughter of Holocaust survivor whose family was hidden by Prince Philip's mother Princess Alice in 1943 says story of the 'courageous act' must keep being told in her memory
- Evy Cohen has thanked Princess Alice for saving her family from Nazis in 1943
- The royal is Prince Philip's mother and a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria
- After marrying a Greek prince, she lived in Athens during the Second World War
- Offered Evy's father Alfred Haimaki Cohen refuge on the top floor of her houseThe daughter of a Holocaust survivor saved from the Nazis by Prince Philip's mother Princess Alice has said the story of the 'courageous act' must keep being told to keep her memory alive.
During the Nazi occupation of Greece in 1943, the British princess - who was married to Prince Andrew of Greece - sheltered a Jewish family to avoid deportation to death camps.
Evy Cohen, 65, has revealed how her father Alfred Haimaki Cohen, head of a prominent family with ties to Greek royalty, sought out the royal as their only hope of refuge from the Nazis. The royal gave shelter to widow Rachel Cohen and two of her children, Tilde and Michel, before Evy's father Alfred fled the country, knowing his family would be safe in the care of Alice.
Speaking to The Sun following the tragic death of Prince Philip last Friday, Evy insisted that her family 'would not exist without the courageous act of Princess Alice.'
The daughter of a holocaust survivor saved from Nazis by Prince Philip's mother Princess Alice has thanked the late royal for her bravery. Princess Alice is pictured in 1945
Pictured: Tilde Cohen and her mother Rachel with Evy's father Alfred and grandfather Haimaki
She added: 'Princess Alice's story of incredible courage must keep being told in her memory.'
Her father Alfred was a prominent member of the community of 8,000 Jewish people in Athens, who came across Alice's lady-in-waiting and sought help from Nazi persecution. The royal quickly offered the family refuge on the top floor of her house, only yards from Gestapo headquarters.
Princess Alice, who was born in Windsor Castle lived in Athens during the Second World War. Her son Prince Philip moved to the UK as a boy and lived under the care of his uncle Lord Mountbatten.
Princess Alice has been formally recognised for the bravery and courage she demonstrated hiding members of the Cohen family during the Nazi persecution. She is pictured with her son, Prince Philip, at Windsor Castle
Many TV viewers were introduced to the remarkable story of the Duke of Edinburgh's mother in the third series of The Crown, where she was played by actress Jane Lapotaire.
It showed how Princess Alice moved to Buckingham Palace in 1967 and remained in the UK for the last two years of her life.
Princess Alice has been formally recognised for the bravery and courage she demonstrated hiding members of the Cohen family during the Nazi persecution.
Reading a letter written by her father in Channel 5 documentary Princess Alice: The Royals Greatest Secret, Evy revealed the extraordinary good fortune her father felt.
He wrote: 'For us it was an absolute miracle, in short that lady [in waiting] had gone to see the Princess and an hour later we were informed that the Princess Alice would be more than happy to take in my mother and sister.
Dr Anna Whitelock, royal historian and expert explained that when the German generals came around looking for Jewish people in hiding, Alice pretended couldn't understand them, because she was deaf, and they thought she was 'a silly old woman and left her in peace'.
Many TV viewers were introduced to Princess Alice in Netflix's The Crown, with actress Jane Lapotaire playing her in the third series of the hit royal drama
Alice of Battenburg is pictured with Prince Charles as young man. The royal died at Windsor Castle in 1969
'People were being executed for looking after Jewish families, but Alice had no fear,' said Ingrid Seward, editor of Majesty magazine.
The Cohen family was never discovered, and Alice kept her bravery a secret throughout her life.
Alice was born deaf and later diagnosed with schizophrenia, yet she would learn to read lips in German, English, Greek, and dedicate her life to helping others.
Sent to a mental asylum, given controversial electroshock treatment by Sigmund Freud, she would overcome the most extraordinary personal challenges to help those she saw as more in need than herself.
During the war, and separated from her children, she served as a military nurse on the frontline and founded an order of nursing nuns in Greece, before finally coming to live at Buckingham Palace, with the Queen.
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