The author urged his neighbor-Segal to jump ou...
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The author urged his neighbor-Segal to jump out of the train with them. Segal replied-' What's the use?They've taken my wife and daughter. Either I'll find them alive again somewhere, or I'll die like them'.
- 1942-09-04
- 1942-09-04
- deportation
- private life / daily life
- atmosphere, rescue attempts, deportation
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Related sources:
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Written between 1952 and 1954, the book is a key work documenting the Warsaw ghetto from its establishment to its final days.
How did life look like in the Warsaw ghetto? What organizations took - or should have taken - care of its inhabitants? How did so many survive in such a terrible isolation? In answering those questions Michel Mazor details the vanishing of a city.
The book is a study of the social and political life of the Warsaw ghetto. - 174
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Related people:
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Mazor
Michel
He was born in Kiev of jewish parents. After studying law, he left Russia at the outbreak of the civil war and moved...
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Segal
Unknown
A dentist, a member of the Jewish Social Welfare Association. He probably died in Treblinka.
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Segal
Unknown
She died in Treblinka. Segal's wife.
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Segal
Unknown
She died in Treblinka. Segal's daughter.
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Mazor
Michel