Beyond Its Beginnings: The 80 Candles Quilt and a Place in History

There are moments in a project when you realise something has moved beyond its beginnings.

A copy of The 80 Candles Quilt: Honouring Individual Lives Through Collaborative Stitch has now been accessioned into the collection of the The Wiener Holocaust Library in London. For those unfamiliar with the library, it is one of the world’s most significant archives dedicated to the study and remembrance of the Holocaust.

For the 80 Candles Quilt project, this moment feels deeply meaningful. When the quilt was first conceived, the intention was to humanise history. Each stitched square represents an individual life affected by the Nazi regime. Participants were invited to research a person, learn something of their story, and translate that connection into a piece of slow stitched textile. The process was intentionally reflective: a quiet act of remembrance, carried out both individually and within community workshops.

Alongside those who researched individuals they had never met, members of the Derbyshire Jewish Community shared something even more personal. They entrusted the project with the stories of their own families, memories of grandparents, great-grandparents and relatives whose lives had been shaped by persecution, loss, survival and displacement.

For many families, these stories exist primarily within personal archives or through oral history, passed down across generations. In some cases the individuals themselves are not widely documented elsewhere. Their lives are remembered through family memory, through the telling and retelling of stories, through photographs, fragments of documents and treasured recollections. To hold those stories, even briefly, felt like a responsibility.

The quilt became a space where those lives could be honoured. Participants took time to sit with the histories they encountered, often finding small but meaningful ways to connect with the person they were remembering. Through thread and fabric, each square became a quiet act of acknowledgement: a life recognised, a story held. The book was created so that those stories could continue to travel beyond the quilt itself.

Knowing that a copy of the book is now held within the collection of the Wiener Holocaust Library means that some of those personal histories now sit within one of the most important repositories of Holocaust documentation in the world. Researchers, educators and future generations will be able to encounter these stories as part of the wider historical record.

For the families who shared them, it means that the lives of their relatives are now held within a place dedicated to remembrance and understanding. And for the project itself, it feels like an extension of its original purpose. The quilt sought to humanise history through collaboration and remembrance. The accessioning of the book ensures that the stories behind those stitched squares will continue to exist within a permanent archive, helping to ensure that the individuals remembered and the families who carry their memory, will not be forgotten.

This moment does not belong to the project alone. It belongs to the members of the Derbyshire Jewish Community who shared their family histories with such openness and trust. It belongs to the participants who spent hours researching individuals they had never met, seeking ways to honour their lives with care and dignity. And it belongs to everyone who contributed their time, thought and compassion to the making of the quilt.

What began as a collaborative act of remembrance has now become part of a lasting historical record.

That feels quietly extraordinary.

If you would like to order a copy details can be found here.

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