Given name: Hania Family name: Unknown
- YES
- Female
- Hania
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Doctor Hania, Anatol's friend. He comes back to the ghetto with her in 1941. They lived apart. The parties took place in her flat once a week. She had a lot of sardines and other conserves, with which she often treated everyone. She worked in the Medical Chamber of the Judenrat. She had a Red Cross armband, she was free of round-ups. In Runda, when she's not there, the Germans search for her in the rented flat. The landlords are obliged to direct her to Bolmowo, threatened by the punishment. The woman doesn't want to endanger the landlords and goes to Bolmowo, where Germans kill her in the woods.
- around the author
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302/204 Anatol Weksztejn, born 24 January 1874 in Lowicz, son of Michal and Maria, nee Wodzisławska, no title. The story of the author's family (pioneers of assimilation). The author's youth, school years in Kharkov, work in the ceramic industry. World War I in Lowicz and Warsaw in the Society to Help the Jewish War Victims. Internment in Germany. The inter-war period - general reflections on Zionism and baptism of Jews. The economic situation of inter-war Poland, the role of Jews in Polish economy. The author's escape to Lutsk during the Polish-German War of 1939 and his return to Warsaw. Situation in the Warsaw ghetto, criticism of the Jewish Police (Order Service). His stay on the 'Aryan side', help from friendly Poles, frequent changes of shelters. Liberation, return to Lowicz. The author was an industrialist, owner of ceramic factories in Lowicz and Boryszew, and a co-owner of artificial silk factory in Sochaczew. Typescript, pages 1-204,format: 290 x 210 mm, in Polish.
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