Overview
- Interviewee
- Abraham Barough
- Interviewer
- Joan Schwartz
- Date
-
interview:
1994 April 24
Physical Details
- Language
- English
- Extent
-
1 videocassette (U-Matic) : sound, color ; 3/4 in..
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
- Conditions on Use
- Restrictions on use
Keywords & Subjects
- Topical Term
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Personal narratives. Holocaust survivors--United States.
- Personal Name
- Barough, Abraham.
Administrative Notes
- Holder of Originals
-
Orange County California Anti-Defamation League
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- Joan Schwartz on behalf of the Anti-Defamation League, Orange County, California, conducted the interview with Abraham Barough on April 24, 1994. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum received the copy of the interview from the Anti-Defamation League, Orange County, California on May 3, 2000.
- Special Collection
-
The Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive
- Record last modified:
- 2023-11-16 08:56:33
- This page:
- http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn512075
Download & Licensing
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- See Rights and Restrictions
- Terms of Use
- This record is digitized but cannot be downloaded online.
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Also in The Holocaust Oral History Project of the Anti-Defamation League, Orange County, California collection
Consists of 152 interviews of Holocaust survivors in the Orange County, California area
Date: 1992-1995
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Rosalie Wattenberg (née Rosalie Fromer), born in 1919 in Warsaw, Poland, describes her family and childhood in a large Jewish community in Warsaw; her father’s work in the leather business; her oldest brother who was a doctor; her middle brother who immigrated to the United States in 1936; her youngest brother who taught in beauty colleges; her youngest sister Helen who was born in 1923 (see RG-50.493.0003); antisemitism in Poland before WWII; the Nazis occupying the city in September 1939, and forming a ghetto; her grand-uncle and grand-aunt moving during the war and both dying of starvation within three months of each other (her grand-uncle was 86 years old when he died); marrying her husband on December 25, 1939; developing spotted typhus and her temperature rising to 105 degrees; getting pregnant at age 22 while in a camp (circa 1941); escaping the camp, going to a gynecologist and having a live abortion without any medication because she would have been killed if she had the child; her father-in-law being shot when the liquidation began; hiding in the Mila 18 bunker in Warsaw while people were grabbed in the street; developing pneumonia; going to a camp with her husband; being taken on trucks to the Warsaw Umschlagplatz (a detention and transfer camp for Jews near the ghetto); being sent to Flugplatz labor camp in Lublin, Poland, and staying there for eight weeks; walking to the Majdanek death camp, where she met two of her husband’s sisters with their children, after which she never saw them again; being given clothes that had lice; she and her sister Helen being sent to Skarzysko ammunition factory then being evacuated from Skarzysko and sent to another factory when the allies were closing in; going to Ravensbrück concentration camp for approximately four weeks then to Burgao, Turkheim, and Dachau just before it was liberated in April 29, 1945; weighing only 60 pounds at liberation; and moving with her sister and their families to the US on April 10, 1948.
Oral history interview with Helen Greenbaum
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Helen Greenbaum (née Fromer), born in 1923 in Warsaw, Poland, describes her family and childhood; her father working in the leather business; antisemitism in Poland before WWII; radios, fur coats and fur collars being taken from Jewish people; seeing people lying in the streets, swollen from hunger; bodies in the Warsaw ghetto being placed on carts and rolled into mass graves; the shooting of doctors and lawyers; her oldest brother running away with his wife and son toward Russia and hiding; her father being taken away; her youngest brother being taken to a work camp on the outskirts of Warsaw; preparing with her mother to go to the Warsaw Umschlagplatz (a detention and transfer camp for Jews), when a man instead got them work in a Schultz uniform factory in a small ghetto in Warsaw; her mother being taken away; how she and her sister (Rosalie Wattenberg, see RG-50.493.0003) were taken from the ghetto to Flugplatz labor camp in Lublin, Poland, then to Majdanek death camp where they had to do digging and carry boulders; being sent to work at the Skarzysko ammunition factory; she and her sister being sent on January 16, 1945, to the Tschenstochau ammunition factory; how she was beaten for not meeting quota; being sent to Ravensbrück; developing scurvy; walking for several days; American soldiers liberating their camp and treating them with special care; getting married and having a son in Berlin, Germany; moving to the United States in 1948 and settling in New York.
Oral history interview with Isaac Green
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Oral history interview with Stephen Nasser
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Oral history interview with Erno Rubin
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Oral history interview with Herman Goslins
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Oral history interview with Alice Friedmann
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Oral history interview with Ted Kenig
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Oral history interview with Harry Fern
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Oral history interview with Martha Posalsky
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Oral history interview with Irene Bors
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Irene Bors, born August 20, 1918, in Selezenivka, Ukraine, discusses her refugee parents Henrik and Helen Bekker; her family’s move to Lublin, Poland in 1921; growing up securely without antisemitism; being educated at home early on and then going to private university in Warsaw, Poland; meeting her husband Stanley in 1937 and getting married in 1939 when Germany had already taken over Poland; her parents staying; leaving with Stanley for a part of Poland occupied by the Soviet Union; trying to get back to her parents who were in the Lublin Ghetto which already being liquidated; her parents’ deportation to Treblinka and perishing at Majdanek; arriving at the Warsaw Ghetto, where Stanley worked in a bakery and she in a factory; their luck in escaping by jumping off of a truck on the way to work on a farm one week before the Warsaw ghetto uprising; getting in touch with her great-uncle in Grodzisk (a suburb of Warsaw) who they went with to Rembertów on the west bank of Warsaw to a villa; getting false Polish documents; being on the run after escaping from the villa once Germans arrived and murdered all who lived there; trying to get back to Lublin in January 1945 once Russian tanks came and finding out her parents were killed and Stanley’s parents were killed; settling in Berlin, Germany, where she became pregnant with her daughter Helene; finally getting papers after four years and going to the United States in August 1949; finding her husband’s family in Boston, MA and then moving to New York, NY and then Chicago, IL; buying a small chicken farm in Hebron, IN; selling the farm after five years and deciding to raise their family in Gary, IN; working for 16 years in a Methodist Hospital in Gary as a medical technologist after getting her license; and moving to California where their daughter had settled.
Oral history interview with Lilo Fern
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Oral history interview with Henry Palmer
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Henry Palmer (né Belcman), born in 1913 in Ostrog Nae Horyien, Poland (now Ostroh, Ukraine near Horyn River); his father dying during World War I from dysentery in 1919 when Henry was six years old; living with his mother and two younger sisters; the conditions in the town, which were not very good as there were many poor people; attending both Hebrew school and local Polish school; beginning Polish gymnasium (high school) around the age of 11; becoming a tutor; becoming a teacher after graduation; continuing to teach after the Russians invaded in 1939 because he could speak Russian; feeling the Russians treated them and other displaced people well; fleeing in 1941 with his wife, daughter, and son to Russia due to antisemitic threats to his life; moving to Czelabinsk (Chelyabinsk, Russia); being given citizenship immediately; moving with his family in 1941 to Uzbekistan, where he was a teacher because he could speak German; being a bookkeeper but also having a plot of land which he and his family grew rice; staying in Uzbekistan for five years; working hard but being happy; a 1946 agreement that allowed Polish Jews to return to Poland; deciding to be a director of orphans sent back to Poland; the large amount of antisemitism and numerous returning Jews being killed; the Joint sponsoring his family to go to Paris, France; working for the Jewish Agency in Palestine, the Department for Children which helped moved children in Europe to Israel; living in Paris for eight years; his wife having their third child (son) while in Paris; moving to Detroit, Michigan in 1954 to be near his wife’s brother-in-law; changing his last name to Palmer due to difficulty of last name spelling; working as a bookkeeper with the help of the Joint; attending college and becoming an accountant; retiring in 1978 at the age of 65; and moving to California.
Oral history interview with Rubin Minsky
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Rubin Minsky, born on February 18, 1919 in Warsaw, Poland, discusses his sisters Tova, Leah, Hanna, and Luba; being the second oldest; his father who made caps, pens, and other products that his mother helped to sell; his family being able to stay together until 1942; the establishment of the large ghetto in 1941 and a smaller ghetto in 1942; the conditions which were very bad and many people were starving; his youngest sister being arrested at the beginning of 1942 and being sent on a transport to Treblinka (she did not survive); Germans arriving in the ghettos with tanks; staying in basement bunkers; being sent to Majdanek for about a month; being sent to Auschwitz and his work building a factory which produced synthetic rubber and synthetic gasoline for three years; being sent to Buchenwald around 1945; arriving in a train which had about 10 wagons that were mostly filled with people who did not survive the journey; being liberated; going to Halberstadt, Germany, where he met and married his wife; sneaking into Belgium after being denied a visa; living in Belgium for four years; the birth of his first son in 1946; moving in 1953 with his family to the United States; his three children; and his tattoo from Auschwitz.
Oral history interview with Rose Minsky
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Oral history interview with Jacob Eisenbach
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Oral history interview with Herman Leefsma
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Oral history interview with Margaret Guiness
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Margaret Guiness (née Wohl), born in Košice, Czechoslovakia, discusses her childhood; being the youngest of 10 children; her father Theador Wohl who was a very religious man and worked in the lumber business; her mother Anna Ritter; the Hungarian control in 1939 of their part of Czechoslovakia; by law not being allowed to speak their language and having to attend a Hungarian school; having to follow the Nuremberg laws; the German occupation in March 1944; being forced to wear the Jewish star and having to go to local police for to be identified and counted; the Germans taking the most important Jewish community members as hostages, including Margaret’s sister Manya and her husband who owned a car garage; the hostages never being released; his sister Elizabeth (Bozhena) who procured papers for herself and Margaret (age 14) and fleeing for Budapest, Hungary; the deportation of Jews from Košice to Auschwitz, including two of her sisters, her brother-in-law, and their two children; one of her brothers being hanged at Theresienstadt; being arrested along with her sister and held in the Gestapo prison for four months; hiding their Jewish identities; being sent with her sister in 1944 to Ravensbrück concentration camp; the conditions in the camp which were horrifying, cold, and brutal; being determined to survive to ensure that she would be able to tell the world what she saw and what they had all experienced; the horrifying medical experiments conducted at Ravensbrück; volunteering for all types of work, allowing her to smuggle food to her sister and her barrack; volunteering with her sister to work at a factory in Dortmund, Germany to help build rocket bombs; staying there until spring of 1945; being sent to Bergen-Belsen with her sister in February 1945; conditions at Bergen-Belsen being worse than those at Ravensbrück; the typhoid epidemic and people dying quickly and easily; finding one of her other sisters at Bergen-Belsen; sharing a bunk with Anne Frank for a short time; becoming very ill with typhoid and being plagued with many feverish dreams; seeing the camp Commandant and the other guards being stripped of their weapons and their ranks in April 1945 and thinking it was a dream while in fact the British had arrived and they were being liberated; being sent with her sisters to a hospital where they met with Swedish delegates and decided to move to Sweden, where she lived for three years; the death of her sister Elizabeth six months after their liberation; being contacted by an uncle in America who was able to send her papers; and arriving in the United States in 1949.
Oral history interview with John Friedmann
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John Friedmann, born October 19, 1913 in Vrbove, Czechoslovakia (now Slovenia), describes his life before the war; his parents Adolph and Rudolphina; his father’s occupation as an electrician and cameraman; his family’s move to Austria when he was three months old; his father’s service in the military; his education in public school; his parent’s divorce; his graduation and occupation as a linoleum businessman; his arrest by the Gestapo and transport to Dachau; his time in Dachau until July 1938 when he was transferred to Buchenwald; his transfer to Linz, Austria in October 1938; his release from Linz; his acquisition of a passport that allowed him to travel to Shanghai; his job working for the British City Government of Shanghai supervising trash dumps; his jobs for Toyota and Nissan that allowed him to escape the ghetto; his survival in Shanghai; his mother who stayed in Shanghai; his time in Canada after his unsuccessful attempt to enter the United States; his marriage in 1950; his and his family’s immigration to California in 1952.
Oral history interview with Katalin Rubin
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Oral history interview with Marianne Dazzo
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Oral history interview with Jenny Zavatsky
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Oral history interview with Fanny Labin
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Oral history interview with Nathan Caron
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Oral history interview with Mary Kress
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Oral history interview with Mel Mermelstein
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Oral history interview with Francis Derkum
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Oral history interview with Hans Goldsmith
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Oral history interview with Anatol Chari
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Oral history interview with Gerda Seifer
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Oral history interview with Rita Kaaren
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Oral history interview with Henry Kress
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Henry Kress (né Heniek Krzesiwo), born on July 26, 1924 in Sosnowiec, Poland, describes his family life and childhood; his parents, sister, and close extended family; his father who worked for a large fabric company; graduating in 1939 from school and going to Krakow, Poland due to the impending war; his parents deciding to move 25 miles outside of Krakow because of the bombings; the destruction caused by the German occupation; Jews being ordered to wear the Star of David; getting up every day at 2:00 AM to stand in line until 7:00-8:00 AM to get bread for his family; the liquidation of the ghetto in August 1943 and the subsequent deportations; hiding in a bunker with his parents and several others until they were found; being placed on a train and sent to Auschwitz; his mother telling him “I am going to die, but you are young, try to survive”; arriving in Auschwitz and being separated from his parents, which was the last time he saw them; being sent to Birkenau but eventually placed in Auschwitz Block 1 and then Block 23; working to deliver coal and discovering his sister alive in Birkenau and sneaking over to see her; Henry and his friend Leo escaping from a Death March in January 1945; making it back to Poland and being given a job with the Russian Secret Service; leaving for the American zone in Germany; waiting for three years for his visa to the United States; arriving in the US in 1940 and meeting up with his sister; getting married to Mary Kress in 1951 (he had met her in Germany in 1946 and she had also survived Auschwitz); and having two children and living in Irvine, CA.
Oral history interview with Helena Leefsma
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Helena Leefsma (m. Van Hasselt), born on June 27, 1928 in Groningen, Netherlands, discusses being the youngest of four daughters; her father’s work trading cattle; having a very loving family and happy childhood; living in a very friendly community; the German invasion of Holland in May 1940; their friends who got papers to go to the United States before the Germans invaded; her father’s reluctance to leave Holland because of his business and family (they didn’t think Holland would experience what was taking place in Germany); the restrictions placed on Jews; her father boarding up their windows every evening because rocks were thrown at them; the arrest of her father in May 1942 and never seeing him again (he perished in Auschwitz); her oldest sister Selma, who was part of the resistance and urged their family to go into hiding in August 1942; staying with her mother throughout the war as they hid in many homes in Holland; the arrest of Selma in 1943 (she died in 1943 in Buchenwald); the death of her sister Henrietta in 1943; being liberated May 5, 1945; returning with her mother to their home in Groningen; getting married in 1948; and immigrating to the United States in December 1974.
Oral history interview with Anne Gilbert
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Oral history interview with Frances Gelbart
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Oral history interview with Robert Poznanter
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Oral history interview with Gene Selig
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Oral history interview with Ildiko Good
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Oral history interview with Abe Goldstein
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Oral history interview with Raymond Goldfarb
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Oral history interview with Irene Eisenbach
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Oral history interview with Leo Korn
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Oral history interview with Suzanne Butnik
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Oral history interview with Valerie Lowe
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Oral history interview with Irving Gelman
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Oral history interview with Lou Schotland
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Oral history interview with Leo Mergrun
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Oral history interview with Rochelle Gelman
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Oral history interview with Wilfred Fisher
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Oral history interview with Melvin Darden
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Oral history interview with Doris (Don) Duplechein
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Oral history interview with George Frankl
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Oral history interview with Gerda Rich
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Oral history interview with Irene Boehm
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Oral history interview with Mariana Rosman
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Oral history interview with Elisabeth Frankl
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Oral history interview with Sasha Erlik
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Oral history interview with Margot Stern
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Oral history interview with Ida Brookhouse
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Oral history interview with Irene Opdyke
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Oral history interview with Mark Kaaren
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Oral history interview with Esther Wigodsky
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Oral history interview with Baruch Goldstein
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Oral history interview with Theodore Frumes
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Oral history interview with Rose Judy de Liema
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Oral history interview with Lena Factor
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Oral history interview with Helga Fultheim
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Oral history interview with Stella Loeb Ungar
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Oral history interview with Martin List
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Oral history interview with Roosje Trompeter
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Oral history interview with Harry Gable
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Oral history interview with Cecylia Peltyn
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Oral history interview with Magda Salzer
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Oral history interview with Lilly Black
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Oral history interview with Clara Gonda
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Oral history interview with Margie Strauss
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Oral history interview with Miriam Haas
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Oral history interview with Flory van Beek
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Oral history interview with Gretl Warner
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Oral history interview with Harold Lowenstein
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Oral history interview with Harry Gonda
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Oral history interview with Helen Margines
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Oral history interview with Helena Ben-Josef
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Oral history interview with Isaac Cohen
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Oral history interview with Edith Burke
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Oral history interview with Sarah Schweitz
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Oral history interview with Irwin Binder
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Oral history interview with Aranka Klein
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Oral history interview with Joseph Lederman
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Oral history interview with Ruth Newell
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Oral history interview with Leon Leyson
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Oral history interview with Denise Woldenberg
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Oral history interview with Walter Fried
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Oral history interview with Carmen Cohen
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Oral history interview with Jean Rene Braun
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Oral history interview with Susy Oster
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Oral history interview with Hazzan David Kane
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Oral history interview with Sigmund Burke
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Oral history interview with Haim Asa
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Oral history interview with Andrew May
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Oral history interview with Yetta Kane
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Oral history interview with Jack Pariser
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Oral history interview with Ilse Wolfson
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Oral history interview with Sol Kimmel
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Oral history interview with Gerard Bohm
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Oral history interview with Tova Winiarz
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Oral history interview with Erika May
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Oral history interview with Isidore Apfelbaum
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Oral history interview with Sylvia Simon
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Oral history interview with Joseph Jakobs
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Oral history interview with Susan Angel
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Oral history interview with Marcel Baum
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Oral history interview with Arpad Speiser
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Oral history interview with Jenny Unterman
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Oral history interview with Eva Schneider
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Oral history interview with William Salamon
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Oral history interview with John Stieber
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Oral history interview with Tova Weissman Cohen
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Oral history interview with Tobi Abelsky
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Oral history interview with Karl Hess
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Oral history interview with Leo Bach
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Oral history interview with Herbert Siegel
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Oral history interview with Simon Young
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Oral history interview with Paul Ostrowiecki
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Oral history interview with Marianne Bohm
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Oral history interview with Hanni Vogelweid
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Oral history interview with Rose Spiero
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Oral history interview with Martin Straus
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Oral history interview with Molly Palmer
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Oral history interview with Peter Plessner
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Oral history interview with Galena Segal
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Oral history interview with Sonja Tebrich
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Oral history interview with Henry Heller
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Oral history interview with Piri Katz
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Oral history interview with Arthur Bunzel
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Oral history interview with Ingrid Sacks
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Oral history interview with Kathleen Stieber
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Oral history interview with Ernest Green
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Oral history interview with Bert Jacobs
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Oral history interview with Clara Stern
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Oral history interview with Henry Tebrich
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Oral history interview with Marietta van den Berg
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Oral history interview with Rosa Stopnitzky
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Oral history interview with Margot Kovacs
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