Hermina Hirsch, 89, a Holocaust survivor, sings the national anthem before the baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and the Tampa Bay Rays, Saturday, May 21, 2016, in Detroit. Hirsch's bucket list included singing the anthem before a Tigers game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Hermina Hirsch, 89, a Holocaust survivor, sings the national anthem before the baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and the Tampa Bay Rays, Saturday, May 21, 2016, in Detroit. Hirsch’s bucket list included singing the anthem before a Tigers game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

 

Detroit – An 89-year-old Holocaust survivor has fulfilled her longtime wish to sing the U.S. national anthem at a Major League Baseball game.

Hermina Hirsch sang Saturday at Comerica Park in Detroit before the Detroit Tigers played Tampa Bay.

The Czechoslovakia native lives in Southfield, Michigan. She was 17 when her family was split up and sent to concentration camps in 1944. According to her granddaughter, Andrea Hirsch, Hermina Hirsch and her older sister were shuffled between five concentration camps, including Auschwitz. She was liberated in January 1945.

WWJ-TV has reported that Hirsch has been a Tigers fan since she moved to the Detroit area more than 60 years ago. Hirsch has been singing the anthem for years during Holocaust survivor meetings in the Detroit area.‎

As reported by Vos Iz Neias