Holocaust survivor Tatiana Bucci will be speaking tomorrow at the European Parliament in Brussels during a plenary session dedicated to International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The President of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, will open the ceremony at noon with a commemorative video. She will then deliver a speech, which will be followed by a musical interlude. Tatiana Bucci will then take the floor and address MEPs. The commemoration will conclude with a minute’s silence in honour of the victims of the Holocaust and a second musical interlude. Tatiana Bucci was born in 1938 in Fiume, a town then in northern Italy and now in modern-day Croatia. In 1944, the Nazis arrested Tatiana and her family and imprisoned them at Risiera di San Sabba, a transit concentration camp in northern Italy. Tatiana was just six years old when she and her four-year-old sister Andra, and their mother, aunt, grandmother and cousin were deported to Auschwitz on 4 April 1944. The two sisters spent 10 months in Auschwitz. Their mother, Mira, was transferred from Auschwitz to Germany for forced labour in a munitions factory. Their father, Giovanni, was a prisoner of war in South Africa during the war. Tatiana and Andra Bucci are among the youngest child survivors of Auschwitz who have memories of their experience. After liberation, the sisters were sent to an orphanage, Lingfield House, in southern England, and in December 1946, they were reunited with their parents in Italy. They returned to Auschwitz for the first time in 1996. Tatiana now lives in Belgium with her family.