Women in the Holocaust: A Collection of Testimonies, Band 1Anna Eilenberg-Eibeshitz Remember, 1993 - 248 Seiten Features testimonies detailing the oppression and forced labor of Jewish women during the Holocaust, who were important mainstays in their families. |
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Seite 52
... hunger . In our case , the ability of the entire Jewish population of Goworowa to maintain religious tradition was dependent on a supply of bread , and a young child was ironically in the " safest " position to provide it . Children had ...
... hunger . In our case , the ability of the entire Jewish population of Goworowa to maintain religious tradition was dependent on a supply of bread , and a young child was ironically in the " safest " position to provide it . Children had ...
Seite 127
... hunger grew . Once the Center sent me out to do housekeeping chores in my parents ' house as part of my duties . My mother begged me to eat some food that she had prepared , but I adamantly refused . I did not want to eat when others in ...
... hunger grew . Once the Center sent me out to do housekeeping chores in my parents ' house as part of my duties . My mother begged me to eat some food that she had prepared , but I adamantly refused . I did not want to eat when others in ...
Seite 242
... hunger of the war seemed to have overlooked her completely ; her body was full and her cheeks were pink . In the ghetto as well as here in the lager , she had always managed to be at the kettle , distributing soup a position which ...
... hunger of the war seemed to have overlooked her completely ; her body was full and her cheeks were pink . In the ghetto as well as here in the lager , she had always managed to be at the kettle , distributing soup a position which ...
Inhalt
Introduction | vii |
A Note on the Translation | xvi |
Leaving the Ghetto Sarah Erlichman | 91 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
able Aktion Antek apartment appel Armia Ludowa arrived Aryan side asked Auschwitz barracks became began Bergen-Belsen Birkenau block Branulka bread brother Chaya Chelmno clothing crematoria danger death deported door Edek escape eyes face factory father fear Fela felt friends Frumka Fulek gas chambers gave Germans Gestapo ghetto girls guard hand happened head heard heart hiding Holocaust hospital husband Jewish Jews Judenrat Kapo Katzenelson knew Kommando Krakow lager later learned leave lives Lodz Lodz ghetto looked Mala Mala's Miss Zelicka morning mother Nazis never night once overseers peyos Plaszow Poland Poles Polish prisoners remember revier Rosh Hashanah Sabbath sick siddur sister smuggled Sosnowiec soup stay stood streets suffering survival talk thought told took town train tried Tzyvia underground Vittel Volksdeutsche wagon walked wanted Warsaw window woman women workers young