POLAND: Photos taken by colouriser Tom Marshall's Great Grandfather Charles Martin King Parsons (CMK Parsons) at Bergen-Belsen prison camp. The wooden huts were burnt to the ground in May 1945 once the surviving prisoners had been evacuated, as the camp was rife with typhus with as many of 500 people dying of the disease every day. HARROWING colourised images of the Holocaust which expose the full terrors faced by the death camp?s inmates have emerged SEVENTY-FIVE-YEARS after the liberation of Auschwitz, the largest Nazi death camp. Sobering photos, some revamped in colour for the first time, capture the horror of genocide in the eyes of a gaunt 18-year-old Russian woman; a concentration camp responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people being ceremonially burnt to the ground by liberating British forces; and malnourished Jewish children peering out at their Soviet rescuers through a barbed wire fence at Auschwitz. Other upsetting colourisations include a smiling portrait of four-year-old, Istvan Reiner, taken just a few weeks before he was murdered at the infamous death camp, and another showing a palpably relieved young Jewish refuge recuperating in hospital after being rescued by appalled Allied Forces. Mediadrumimages/TomMarshall(PhotograFix)2020