Given name: N. Family name: N.
- YES
- N.
- N.
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The German that visited the author in her flat at Zamenhofa Street No. 56 in February 1943. Gave sweets to her child and told her about the defeat that the German army suffered at Stalingrad. When the author was on the 'Aryan side' in summer 1943 she noticed a German looking similar to her unexpected visitor from a couple of months ago. He entered the camp that was being formed in the terrain of the destroyed ghetto as a prisoner. The author was positive that he was a communist.
- Germans
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Living conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto. German looting and provisioning problems. The author worked for the House Committee in Ogrodowa Street. Operation of People's Kitchens, combating typhus. Worsening starvation, food smuggling. Shooting a German propaganda film in the ghetto. The great liquidation action (the author was hiding with her child, and avoided deportation as a physician's wife). Living conditions in the 'rump ghetto' after the action; deportations in January 1943. In February 1943, the author and her child crossed to the so-called 'Aryan side'. The Memoir was written in hiding on the Aryan side in Warsaw. The note reads: 'Memoir submitted by Mrs Brzezinska, the Polish-Soviet Institute', pp. 1-31, format: 290 x 210 mm, in Polish.
- 29, 30