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News Report Page 6 of 11
Publication Date:-
2026-02-05
   
News reports located on this page = 2.

Photography exhibition reveals the life changing power of helplines

A powerful new photography project and exhibition will go on display in Liverpool next month to showcase the important role helplines play in providing understanding, care and advice when it's needed most. Developing in the Dark; illuminating stories of support is a portrait photography exhibition to mark:- 'Helplines Awareness Day,' which takes place on:- Monday:- 23 February 2026.

The project, a collaboration between Rachel Brewster Wright from Little Vintage Photography and Helplines Partnership, the membership body for helpline charities, will feature striking portraits and personal reflections from people whose lives have been touch or transformed by a helpline. Each portrait will highlight the life changing difference that reaching out for support can make.
         
The exhibition will be held at:- The Shed, Baltic Creative, 49 Jamaica Street, Liverpool, L1 0AH.

The exhibition is free and open to anyone. Walk in public viewing is on:- Monday, 23 February 2026, from:- 9am to 5pm, and Wednesday, 25 February 2026, from:- 9am to 5pm. All are welcome.

Helplines Partnership and Little Vintage Photography would also like to invite the people of Liverpool and surrounding areas to a special evening view on:- Wednesday:- 25 February 2026, from:- 6pm to 8pm. The event is free, but please register here. 

Developing in the Dark is an analogue film photography project that reflects a deliberately slower, more intentional medium. Analogue film photography requires patience, presence and care; the same qualities that define every helpline conversation.

Gemma Khairi, Operations Director at Helplines Partnership
, said:- "Helplines are often the 1st point of contact for people facing their darkest moments; offering a listening ear, compassionate support, and vital guidance when it matters most. This exhibition beautifully captures the human connection that happens during those conversations and the real, lasting impact they can have on people's lives. Through these powerful portraits and personal stories, we hope to shine a light on both the courage it takes to reach out for help and the transformative support that helplines provide every single day. It's not just a photography project. It's proof that helplines save lives."

Rachel Brewster Wright, Photographer and Owner of Little Vintage Photography
, said:- "In the age of AI, it's been a privilege to work on such a special project, slowing down the process by shooting with film and using physical darkroom prints to bring these stories of human connection to life in a completely unique and beautifully imperfect way."


Holocaust Memorial Day sees Southport MP warn:- 'The Holocaust did not begin with camps or killing but with words'
Photographs by Andrew Brown.

HOLOCAUST Memorial Day took place Tuesday:- 27 January 2026, as Southport's MP warned people today to heed the lessons of the past, saying:- "The Holocaust did not begin with camps or killing. It began with words. With prejudice. With the slow erosion of empathy, and the gradual normalisation of exclusion and hatred." 


In addition to the annual commemorative event, well known buildings and landmarks across the UK will be lit in purple during this evening as part of HMD's annual:- 'Light the darkness' event. The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust encourages people to light candles in homes and communities as part of a national moment of remembrance scheduled for 8pm.  The theme for 2026 is:- 'Bridging Generations.' Sefton marked the event with its annual Holocaust Memorial Service at Christ Church in Southport on Sunday, with a range of speakers at a poignant event.



Southport MP Patrick Hurley
said:- "81 years have passed since the liberation of Auschwitz. And yet, for the Jewish people and all those whose forefathers were murdered, the Holocaust is not something distant or abstract. It lives in memory, in family histories, in the spaces where lives should have unfolded but were taken away. We remember the 6 million Jewish men, women, and children who were murdered during the Holocaust. We remember babies whose lives barely began, who might still have been alive today. Parents who tried to protect their children in unimaginable circumstances. Grandparents whose stories were never finished. We also remember that the Holocaust did not begin with camps or killing. It began with words. With prejudice. With the slow erosion of empathy, and the gradual normalisation of exclusion and hatred. Holocaust Memorial Day exists because remembrance matters. And that remembrance matters not just as a gesture, but more importantly, as a responsibility; a responsibility for our own times. This year's theme, Bridging Generations, speaks to a moment we are living through. The survivors who bore witness, who carried their memories with extraordinary courage, are now fewer with each passing year. Their voices, that have shaped our understanding, inevitably grow weaker. Their testimonies, that have taught us not only what happened, but what can happen when humanity fails, have to be relearned for a new generation. As those voices grow quieter, the responsibility to remember does not fade. Rather, it is passed on. It is carried by children and grandchildren, by families and communities, and by all of us who choose to listen, learn, and remember. We become the bridge between past and future. Holocaust Memorial Day reminds us where prejudice can lead when it is left unchallenged. It asks us to remain attentive to the ways language, stereotypes, and division can cause harm. It calls on us to protect the dignity of every person, and to stand against hatred in all its forms. When we light candles in memory, we do so with humility. The light is a symbol of hope. A quiet commitment that the lessons of the past will be carried learned anew. Remembrance is not about dwelling in sorrow alone. It is about honouring lives by choosing compassion. It is about ensuring that history is taught truthfully. And it's about building a future shaped by understanding rather than fear. Today, we remember those who were murdered. We honour those who survived. And we re-affirm our shared responsibility to protect the future by remembering the past. May the memories of those we commemorate today be a blessing. May our remembrance be meaningful. And may we remain alive to the dangers we still face now, and will face for generations to come."

On:- 27 January 1945, the infamous concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, operated by Nazi Germany, in South West Poland, was liberated by Russian troops.

27 January is now the day the world remembers the Holocaust, its victims and those from other acts of genocide throughout history.



Holocaust Memorial Day began in 2000 when 46 Governments signed the Stockholm Declaration. It came about after Government representatives from around the world met in Stockholm, Sweden to discuss the education, remembrance and research of the Holocaust.

The United Nations also marks 27 January as an annual International Day of Commemoration to remember the victims of the Holocaust.



To learn more about the Holocaust; visit the Holocaust Education Trust website.

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