logo
Family haunted by Nazi lampshade made of human skin

Family haunted by Nazi lampshade made of human skin

Yahoo04-05-2025
Warning: Article contains distressing content and pictures
A family said they have felt haunted for 80 years by a piece of a lampshade made from human skin seized from a concentration camp and brought home for evidence.
The macabre object was given to then-Caerphilly MP Ness Edwards, who went with a parliamentary delegation to the Buchenwald concentration camp in April 1945 to gather evidence of the horrors of the Holocaust.
Buchenwald, near Weimar, Germany, had been chosen by the SS division of the Nazis as the place that produced objects made from human skin - preferably skin that had been tattooed.
Mr Edwards' daughter Baroness Liln Golding, 91, from Caerphilly, said it weighed heavily on her father for the rest of his life.
Recalling the moment she opened the door to him on his return, she said: "It was so traumatic just to see his face. I wanted to give him a hug. But I couldn't.
"He said to me 'don't touch me, I'm covered in lice'. That moment was engraved in my heart, from my whole being."
Hitler's watch sells for $1.1m in controversial sale
Book tells how city on Nazi hitlist coped in war
Did Nazi Rudolf Hess have a family link to Wales?
During the April 1945 visit, Mr Edwards and his fellow MPs were shown around the camp and spoke to those who had been inmates there.
He was given a piece of a lampshade as evidence to take back to Britain - the original was broken up and, other than the frame, no other parts remained traceable.
Baroness Golding said her dad told her of people at the camps who were "skin and bones with vacant eyes".
She added: "We need to remember this, so it can never happen again."
Despite wanting to preserve this valuable evidence, Mr Edwards could not face having the piece of lampshade in his home, so gave it to his son to keep safe.
His granddaughter Amanda Kynaston was told about the object when she was a teenager and how it was given to her grandfather by the head of the American army that liberated the camp.
"I didn't appreciate its significance then, it was kept in our house in Caerphilly but my dad kept it under lock and key," she said.
"So I was aware that this object was kept in the family home over the years."
Like her grandfather and father, Ms Kynaston wanted to preserve this evidence and when her dad died, her mum came to live with her a brought the piece of lampshade with her.
It was "locked away in our study... a case of out of sight, out of mind".
After her mother died, Ms Kynaston and her siblings thought it would be a good time to find a new home for the lampshade piece.
It was felt that Buchenwald would be the ideal place and Ms Kynaston was contacted by Prof Myfanwy Lloyd of Oxford University who had been trying to track down the lampshade section as part of her research.
"As a family, we were so grateful to have been contacted by Myfanwy, who was able to facilitate the lampshade's return to Buchenwald," said Ms Kynaston.
"I felt a real mixture of emotions about this - I was very relieved that the responsibility of keeping the lampshade had been taken off me.
"To me, it just felt right for it to go back to where it came from.
"I also felt deep pride in my grandfather Ness and his part in gathering evidence of the Holocaust."
Prof Lloyd said the group that visited in 1945 was "profoundly affected by what they saw in the camp – the brutalised and sick survivors, as well as the unburied bodies and the crematorium.
"It utterly convinced them of the atrocities committed by the Nazis and gave them compelling evidence to share with the British public through their parliamentary report, newspaper articles and even newsreel film," she added.
"Many, including Ness Edwards, would feel the effects for years to come – he suffered nightmares, and others reported they would always be haunted by what they had seen."
Holm Kirsten from the Buchenwald Memorial museum said the piece of lampshade was identified "on the basis of its shape and condition as part of a desk lamp that stood in the study of the Buchenwald camp commandants, by comparing it with a series of historical photographs".
He added that tests done in a German forensic laboratory confirmed it was human skin based on the grain pattern of the surface, arrangement and distribution of hair pores and comparisons with other samples.
For ethical reasons, there are no plans to display the piece, but a photo of the lamp on the commandant of Buchenwald's desk is on the Museum of Resistance and Deportation of Besancon's website.
Charles commissions Holocaust survivor portraits
Portraits of last Holocaust survivors unveiled
Holocaust survivors 'could help' child refugees
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Illegal migrant allegedly murdered teen who tried to stop him attacking his mom: ‘Rapist and cold-blooded killer'
Illegal migrant allegedly murdered teen who tried to stop him attacking his mom: ‘Rapist and cold-blooded killer'

New York Post

time9 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Illegal migrant allegedly murdered teen who tried to stop him attacking his mom: ‘Rapist and cold-blooded killer'

An illegal migrant in Kentucky allegedly murdered a 15-year-old boy when the teen tried to stop him from raping his mom, according to authorities. Mexican national Gildardo Amandor-Martinez, 36, is accused of fatally shooting his girlfriend's son, Luis Lopez, when the teen attempted to thwart the sick sexual assault in their Morehead apartment in the early hours of July 20. The teen's younger sister was also struck and injured. '15-year-old Luis Lopez died trying to save his mother from this criminal illegal alien who was attempting to rape her,' Homeland Security assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. Gildardo Amandor-Martinez, 36, allegedly killed his girlfriend's son, Luis Lopez, when the teen tried to thwart the sick sexual assault in their Morehead, Kentucky apartment on July 20. The Department of Homeland Security 'Gildardo Amandor-Martinez is a rapist and cold-blooded killer who should have never been in this country.' The Mexican national had returned home from a bar just after 2:30 a.m. when he allegedly tried to have sex with his girlfriend in their bedroom, according to court documents obtained by the Lexington Herald Leader. The mom was screaming and trying to fight him off when her son ran into the room and asked if he should call the cops, authorities said. Martinez allegedly ordered Luis to leave and his mom assured him they'd talk about it in the morning, according to the court papers. Amandor-Martinez, a Mexican national, had returned home from a bar just after 2:30 a.m. when he allegedly tried to have sex with his girlfriend, Aleida Lopez, in their bedroom. Rowan County Coroner's Office After the boy left the room, the alleged perp grabbed a pistol and fired three shots through a closed door — striking Luis and his younger sister. Luis suffered a gunshot wound to the face and was pronounced dead at the scene, while his injured sister was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment. Amandor-Martinez was arrested and slapped with a slew of charges, including rape, resisting arrest and assault. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has since lodged an ICE detainer for him, which calls for local cops to hold illegal migrants in custody until they can be turned over to the feds. Amandor-Martinez was in the US illegally at the time of the slaying, federal officials said. He allegedly tried to illegally cross the US-Mexico border three times in 2021 under the Biden administration. The alleged killer was eventually able to cross undetected 'at an unknown date and location,' DHS said. 'The Biden administration's open-border policies allowed this monster to walk American streets and commit these evil crimes, including murder, assault, and attempted rape, against a mother and her children,' McLaughlin said. 'ICE has placed an arrest detainer to ensure Amandor-Martinez will not be released onto America's streets and allowed to terrorize American families again.'

Ex-WWE boss Vince McMahon accused of reckless driving in Connecticut crash
Ex-WWE boss Vince McMahon accused of reckless driving in Connecticut crash

The Hill

time9 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Ex-WWE boss Vince McMahon accused of reckless driving in Connecticut crash

WESTPORT, Conn. (WTNH) — State police in Connecticut say former WWE CEO Vince McMahon, the husband of Education Secretary Linda McMahon, was issued a misdemeanor summons for reckless driving after allegedly causing a multi-vehicle crash last week. The three-vehicle crash took place on the morning of July 24 on a thoroughfare in Westport, according to an accident report from Connecticut State Police. Officials said McMahon, 79, was driving a 2024 Bentley Continental GT Speed in a northbound lane when he allegedly rear-ended a 2023 BMW 430 in front of him. His car then hit a wooden median guardrail, sending debris over the median into the southbound lane and into the path of a 2020 Ford Fusion, the report indicates. Why Hulk Hogan descended upon American culture at exactly the right time No injuries were reported and all three parties were wearing seatbelts at the time. The airbags in McMahon's vehicle, along with the BMW, were deployed. The three vehicles were towed from the scene, state police said. About 30 feet of the median guardrail also suffered moderate damage. McMahon was issued a misdemeanor summons for reckless driving and following too closely resulting in an accident. The report lists McMahon's address as the former WWE headquarters in Stamford. According to state police, he was released on a $500 non-surety bond and is scheduled to appear in Stamford Superior Court on Aug. 26. Family mourns 4 relatives who died in NC crash, thanks woman who helped rescue 5th The accident occurred the same day wrestling legend Hulk Hogan died at the age of 71. McMahon posted his condolences to X hours after the crash. 'The world lost a treasure today. Hulk Hogan was the greatest WWE Superstar of ALL TIME, someone who was loved and admired around the world,' his post read. Nexstar's WTNH has reached out to McMahon's representatives for comment. In 2022, McMahon stepped down as WWE's chief executive amid a company investigation into sexual misconduct allegations. He also resigned as executive chairman of the board of directors of TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of WWE, last year, a day after a former WWE employee filed a sexual abuse lawsuit against him. McMahon has denied the allegations. Vince and Linda McMahon are both accused in a separate suit of knowing about a ringside announcer who allegedly sexually abused young boys for years but doing nothing about it. They have denied those accusations as well.

The Jeffrey Epstein saga: a new national security threat?
The Jeffrey Epstein saga: a new national security threat?

UPI

time39 minutes ago

  • UPI

The Jeffrey Epstein saga: a new national security threat?

U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman speaks during a news conference about the arrest of American financier Jeffrey Epstein in New York on July 8, 2019, on sex trafficking charges, File photo by Jason Szenes July 30 (UPI) -- The sordid saga of the long dead and convicted predator Jeffrey Epstein not only poses a threat to Donald Trump's presidency, but it also conceivably threatens the credibility of the U.S. political system. Yet, an even more sinister and potentially dangerous threat lurks for the United States and its friends. The two threats are linked, ironically, by Epstein's ghost. Trump's MAGA base is furious that the promised Epstein files have not been released. What's worse is that that Attorney General Pam Bondi apparently informed Trump his name was in the file -- high-test fuel for that blaze. And, now, possibly to deflect attention, Trump and his director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, have accused former President Barack Obama of treason by interfering in the 2016 election with Russian help. In a nation as politically divided as America, any spark could ignite a political firestorm. Beijing, Moscow and others with malicious intent are intensely watching this saga. One conclusion must be that even greater opportunities exist today to interfere in United States and Western politics, not just exploiting this debacle. More importantly, creating new crises that manipulate and fracture political and social cohesion is a formidable danger. The U.K.'s Brexit is an example of manipulation. In the effort to withdraw from the European Union -- the Leave campaign -- former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his key adviser, Dominic Cummings determined that 1 million or so Britons lacked party affiliation. Then, using social media, this group was targeted with Leave propaganda generated by Cummings. That swung the vote to leave. Cummings was not alone. Substantial evidence exists that Moscow helped influence Brexit and the Leave campaign to weaken the Atlantic Alliance. And Moscow also interfered in the 2016 U.S. elections. Consider the infamous Steele Dossier. Among the allegations, the dossier accused Trump of lewd sexual behavior in Moscow. Suspend reality and imagine Vladimir Putin intervened to help elect Hillary Clinton as president in 2016. Following Cummings' lead, Russian trolls would have filled the Internet with deep-fake photos and invented stories exaggerating or inventing Trump's misconduct. One wonders who might have been elected 45th president. China and Moscow have significant interests in manipulating and fracturing American and Western cohesion. Putin is focused on winning in Ukraine, minimizing sanctions, and in the process, weakening Western solidarity. China is keen on reducing American economic and political influence, as well as annexing Taiwan. It would be negligent to not assume China and Russia are identifying critical weaknesses and potential future fracture points in the United States and elsewhere. In that event where might they focus? National political systems, given the Epstein debacle and national infrastructures, are the two most obvious candidates. Regarding the United States, the Constitution and its system of government based on checks and balances and a division of power among three co-equal branches are the best targets. A super-majority of Americans is highly distrustful and disdainful of government. Exploiting this distrust would not be difficult using the ubiquity of social media and the propensity of Americans to embrace conspiracy theories. Epstein and the Steele Dossier are two examples of how possible future fractures can be invented to sow political, social and economic disruption. The difference is that these effects could be even more destructive. Regarding infrastructure, Israeli and Ukrainian infiltration of two societies with seeming control of their borders and people to launch surprise attacks deep into Iran and Russia underscores how potentially vulnerable military bases and installations are to drones. And even more susceptible to drone attacks are electric generation and power grids, which could cause nationwide disruption. Kinetic attacks on military and civilian infrastructure are fraught with risk. But perceived threats are not. The strategy would be to use a variant of Orson Welles' provocation of massive public and psychological panic in his radio broadcast of War of the Worlds in 1938. Consider future Wellesian scenarios on steroids that threaten catastrophic events or apply fake news reports of spreading epidemics or environmental, financial and other disasters to induce fear and disruption. Concocting new and credible conspiracy theories would be part of this disruptive strategy. None of this is new. The USSR used the Comintern, Cominform and KGB to misinform, disinform, disrupt and provoke. The United States and the U.K. employed similar techniques principally against the Nazis in World War II. However, today is different because social and other media can turn these activities into political weapons of mass disruption. The United States will survive Epstein. Against determined adversaries who intend to create and exploit new political fractures, are the United States and the West ready? That answer is sadly no. Harlan Ullman is UPI's Arnaud de Borchgrave Distinguished Columnist, senior adviser at Washington's Atlantic Council, chairman of a private company and principal author of the doctrine of shock and awe. His next book, co-written with Field Marshal The Lord David Richards, former U.K. chief of defense and due out next year, is Who Thinks Best Wins: Preventing Strategic Catastrophe. The writer can be reached on X @harlankullman.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store