Overview
- Interviewee
- Jelena Liutich
- Date
-
interview:
2016 May 24
- Geography
-
creation:
Abrova (Ivatsevitski Rayon, Belarus)
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, courtesy of the Jeff and Toby Herr Foundation
Physical Details
- Language
- Russian
- Extent
-
1 digital file : MPEG-4.
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
- Conditions on Use
- No restrictions on use
Keywords & Subjects
- Topical Term
- World War, 1939-1945--Personal narratives, Belarusian. Christians--Belarus. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Belarus. World War, 1939-1945--Soviet Union.
- Geographic Name
- Abrova (Ivatsevitski Rayon, Belarus) Belarus--History--German occupation, 1941-1944. Soviet Union. Sporava (Belarus)
- Personal Name
- Liutich, Jelena, 1926-
Administrative Notes
- Holder of Originals
-
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- This is a witness interview of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Perpetrators, Collaborators, and Witnesses: The Jeff and Toby Herr Testimony Initiative, a multi-year project to record the testimonies of non-Jewish witnesses to the Holocaust. The interview was directed and supervised by Nathan Beyrak.
- Funding Note
- The cataloging of this oral history interview has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
- Special Collection
-
The Jeff and Toby Herr Oral History Archive
- Record last modified:
- 2023-11-16 09:25:02
- This page:
- http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn551397
Additional Resources
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- This record is digitized but cannot be downloaded online.
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Oral History
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Oral history interview with Anatoly Garay
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Oral history interview with Vladimir Jarasjuk
Oral History
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Oral history interview with Ivan Nikolajev
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Oral history interview with Vladimir Parkhimchik
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Oral history interview with Zoja Abramova
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Oral history interview with Anna Trofimova
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Oral history interview with Nina Aukhimenia
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Oral history interview with Nina Abakshonok
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Oral history interview with Georgiy Zabavskiy
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Oral history interview with Evgenia Matul
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Evgenia Matul, born in 1927 in Novaja Anrejevka, Belarus, describes the mass murder of Jews in a ghetto in Glusk, many of whom were family acquaintances; the participation of local policemen in the search for Jews; the escape of her Jewish friend who joined the Partisans; hiding another Jewish friend who had been wounded until he recovered and joined the Partisans; the murder of non-Jews from her village; the ghetto in Glusk; the burning of her house by the Germans; joining the Partisans with her father; and the effects of the Holocaust on her family.
Oral history interview with Fedora Subbotkina
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Oral history interview with Viktor Pravosud
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Oral history interview with Maja Bakumets
Oral History
Maja Bakumets, born in 1925 in Bobruisk, Belarus, describes her refugee status at the beginning of the war; her return with her father to Bobruisk; a roundup and mass shooting of Jews in Jelovik; the Jewish ghetto in Bobruisk; the role of local policemen in the persecution of Jews; a mass shooting of Jews at village of Kamenka; an attack by partisans; escaping from a transport that would have relocated her to Germany; and the aftermath of the war.
Oral history interview with Aleksandr Pauk
Oral History
Aleksandr Pauk, born in 1928 in Gomel, Belarus, describes his Jewish teachers Moisey Judevich (now Morris Sorid) and his wife Regina Kaplan Judevich, who were relocated to the ghetto in Pruzany; the forced labor of Jews outside the ghetto; his father bringing food to Jewish acquaintances in the ghetto; how members of the Judenrat, German soldiers, and local policemen guarded the ghetto; the liquidation of the ghetto in 1943; hiding Mr. and Mrs. Judevich despite the threat of death for those who hid Jews; the looting of Jewish belongings by locals; prisoners of war in Pruzany; and the aftermath of the war.
Oral history interview with Semjon Shakarov
Oral History
Semjon Shakarov, born in 1924 in Gomel, Belarus, describes attending school with Jewish children in Zuravici; the relocation of Jews to Pansky manor in 1941; the patrolling of the area by policemen and German soldiers; witnessing a mass killing of Jews by gassing in trucks; the participation of policeman in throwing bodies from trucks into pits; a mass partisan movement in 1942, which included many Jewish members; his membership with the Partisans; and the burning of the villages of Kamenka, Krasnitsa, and Pakhar by German forces.
Oral history interview with Jevdokija Kashparova
Oral History
Jevdokija Kashparova, born in 1932 in Sraryje Zuravichi (Zhuravichy), Belarus, describes fleeing the village Leshashi due to bombings at the beginning of the war; the Jewish population of her village; witnessing the murder of Jewish refugees by German soldiers; and her mother’s refusal to allow German soldiers to be billeted in her family’s home.
Oral history interview with Maria Safonova
Oral History
Maria Safonova, born in 1925 in Sraryje Zuravichi, Belarus, describes the Jewish population of Sraryje Zuravichi; the evacuation of many Jews prior to the German occupation; a mass shooting of Jews behind a nearby hospital; the hanging of partisans; wounding herself so that she would not be forcibly relocated to Germany; and hiding military prisoners in the cellar of her family’s home.
Oral history interview with Petr Velikanov
Oral History
Petr Velikanov, born in 1930 in Mogilev, Belarus, describes the German occupation of Belarus; the pillaging of shops in Zabelishino by German soldiers; looting by local townspeople; the murder of Jewish families by German forces; a partisan attack on local policemen; and the arrest and conviction of a local policeman after the war.
Oral history interview with Viktor Khrjapkin
Oral History
Viktor Khrajapkin, born in 1927 in Kozjany, Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish families of Kozyany; the forced relocation of Jewish families to Ljady; the participation of policemen in the relocation of Jews; a mass killing of Jews in Lyady and Dubrovno; the looting of Jewish property by the police; a column of prisoners of war; violence committed by German guards against women who tried to give bread to the prisoners; guarding German prisoners in 1945; and seeing sites of mass murder after the war.
Oral history interview with Dmitry Gazin
Oral History
Dmitry Gazin, born in 1927 in Vitebsk, Belarus, describes moving to the village of Verhovie (possibly Viarkhoŭe, Vitsebski raion) in 1940; the evacuation of most of the Jewish families early in the war; the sight of prisoners of war being taken through the village on the way to Velikije Luki; the threat by German authorities to kill anyone hiding communists or Jews; German propaganda about how well they feed Russian prisoners; a prisoner of war camp near Luzhesnyanski technical college; witnessing the shooting of a group of Jews by German soldiers; the actions of a villager to help Jewish prisoners escape a shooting; the liquidation of the Jewish ghetto; the pillage and burning of his village in 1942; his time in the concentration camps Vitebsk and Alitus, Lithuania in 1943; a woman who provided policemen with information on families who were helping partisans; the looting of the homes of those killed by local policemen; deportation to Smorgon by train; a priest who helped him escape to the village of Belkovshchina; and the aftermath of the war.
Oral history interview with Viktor Pogorelskiy
Oral History
Viktor Pogorelskiy, born in 1930 on a khutor near the small settlement of Slaveni (in Mogilev Oblast), discusses living in Slaveni during the German occupation; the relocation of the Jewish community to one part of the village, near a brick factory, in 1942; Jews wearing yellow circles or ribbons; the mass shooting of the Jewish population by German soldiers; seeing from his house German soldiers burning dead bodies; his acquaintance with a Jewish boy named Berko who reported that all the Jews were taken to the execution site; Berko joining the partisans; and reuniting with Berko, now known as Boris, in Minsk after the war.
Oral history interview with Nina Tatur
Oral History
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Oral history interview with Leonid Kruzhalenko
Oral History
Leonid Kruzhalenko, born in 1925 in Sverzhen, Gomel Oblast, discusses the German occupation and the forced relocation of Jews into designated homes following bombings and fires; the mandate that Jews had to wear Star of David badges; German soldiers' attacks on Jews; Jews having to go house to house to beg peasants for bread; the use of a work association building as an execution site; seeing German soldiers with dogs bring groups of Jews to the building; the inspection of Jews for gold teeth; seeing villagers he recognized enter the building; seeing several Jewish men with shovels going to dig a pit; the murder of Jewish women and girls by German soldiers; the shooting by a German soldier of Jewish children who were begging for food in the village; seeing pits in which there were the bodies of children; covering the bodies in the pit with soil; the bombing of the execution building; the brutal chief of police, Kozhan, who recruited people who were enemies of Soviet rule; the lack of Jewish survivors from the village; the looting of Jewish belongings by peasants; and his involvement with partisans.
Oral history interview with Nikolay Starovoytov
Oral History
Nikolay Starovoytov, born in 1929 in the village of Rakutino, Gomel Oblast, discusses living in Rakutino during the war; the lack of a Jewish population in Rakutino; attending school in neighboring Sverzhen with Jewish children; the Jewish community in Sverzhen; the German occupation of Sverzhen and the rounding up of Jews into yards guarded by local policemen; some poor Jews who fled before the occupation; wealthy Jews who remained to maintain their belongings; seeing Jewish men working on the highway to repair pits caused by bombings in Serebryanka; German soldiers marching approximately 50 Jewish men from Sverzhen to the forest across a river; trenches in the forest which served as graves for Jews shot by policemen; hearing pistol shots while skiing; hearing about German soldiers and police shooting elderly Jews in their homes; seeing pits with bodies covered with soil; the killing of a policeman named Kozhan by partisans; the liberation of military prisoners from the Gomel labor camp; the wives of the military prisoners who gave the Germans port fat in exchange for their husbands’ freedom; and a young teacher in Sverzhen who spied for the Germans prior to the occupation.
Oral history interview with Galina Savenko
Oral History
Galina Savenko, born in 1932 in Bobruysk, discusses the German occupation of Belarus; positive relationships with her Jewish neighbors prior to the war; attending school with her Jewish friend, Sonya Kaznelson; the mandatory wearing of the yellow Star of David badge and the labeling of Jewish homes with a white “R” following the German occupation; the harsh treatment of Jews by local police; watching German soldiers and local police force Jews out of their homes and into trucks for deportation; seeing her friend Sonya Shapiro board a truck; the emotional reaction of onlookers during the events; hearing machine gun shootings from the direction of a nearby internment camp; the rumor that German soldiers were hanging people at town squares; her grandmother’s exclamation that “they are killing our Jews;” the disappearance of all of the town’s Jews following the deportation; the looting of Jewish belongings by local citizens and policemen; individual acts of resistance; a German soldier giving her family bread and margarine; her family housing a Belarusian boy named Arkasha who German soldiers beat because of his Jewish appearance; a gendarme who nearly released a grenade in her vegetable garden during the German retreat; a churchwarden who looted Jewish belongings; and the churchwarden’s sentence of 10 years in jail after the war.
Oral history interview with Antonia Ryabukho
Oral History
Antonia Ryabukho, born in 1922, discusses traveling by train to Bobruysk from the frontier border where her husband was an officer in service; escaping from a train as it was being bombed; walking from Bialystok to Bobruysk; seeing German forces hang men, separate children and mothers, and throw bodies of the living and dead into wells and fires; hiding with her daughter in bushes to escape German paratroopers; seeing dead bodies by a river full of blood; her survival tactics to save her daughter as they made their way to Bobruysk on foot; Gestapo officers and German soldiers gathering Jews in the town; Jews, Communists, and high-ranking Soviet functionaries being forced to live in a patrolled outdoor area outside Bobruysk; secretly delivering potatoes to Jewish prisoners; hiding Jewish neighbors in her cellar; returning to Bialystok; her husband’s work as an artillerist on fortifications; hiding Jews in her vegetable garden; changing her name to avoid being mistaken as a Communist; joining the Komsomol and receiving a new passport; working as a recruiter for the partisans in 1943; a police chief who joined the Gestapo instead of the partisans; a Gestapo officer’s warning that she will be hanged; recognizing the need to escape; arranging a hiding place for elderly Jews who remained in Bobruysk; the capture of her mother, sister, and nieces who were sent to a concentration camp; the fate of her family members; and the partisan and Soviet army takeover of Bobruysk.
Oral history interview with Valentina Tevyshova
Oral History
Valentina Tevyshova, born in Zhlobin, Belarus in 1925, discusses the German occupation of Belarus; the large prewar Jewish community in Zhlobin; positive relationships with her Jewish neighbors and classmates before the war; the forced relocation of Jews into barracks; seeing German forces and local police load Jews into open trucks; the emotional reaction of bystanders; her discovery that the Jews of the town, including close acquaintances, where being shot; hearing reports that Romani people were taken away to be shot; descriptions of the mass burial pits from bystanders at the execution site; the disappearance of all of the town’s Jews, except for those who had joined the partisans; witnessing German soldiers hang two Russians at the town square; German soldiers deporting young people to work in Germany; her involvement with a partisan unit; the possibility that Jews were killed later in Zhlobin because of the burgomaster’s support of the partisans; the difficulty of joining the partisans and identifying who is a member; a prisoner of war camp in Zhlobin; cases in which prisoners of war joined the local police to survive; and differences among German soldiers in terms of the treatment of civilians.
Oral history interview with Sofya Prokopchik
Oral History
Sofya Prokopchik, born in Lazovoye, Mogilev oblast, discusses life in Grodzyanka during the German occupation; peaceful relationships with Jewish colleagues and neighbors prior to the war; working on a farm alongside Jews; the German invasion in the fall of 1941; Jews being collected and forced into manual labor by German authorities; the participation of policemen in guarding Jews; providing food to starving Jews; the looting of Jewish-owned home by policemen; seeing a procession of Jews being taken to a cemetery by German soldiers and local policemen; her fondness for Jews and feelings of sympathy for them; her uncle’s report that Jews were being shot and were falling into the pits; the survival of two Jewish sisters, one in hiding and one with partisans; the blockade of the village by German forces in 1943; the shooting of peasants who attempted to escape to the forests; the search for partisans in the forest; being shot by German soldiers as she tried to escape into the forest; a Finnish soldier who brought back escapees; seeing a Jewish mother being separated from her daughter; the shooting of the Jewish mother at the village council; being chased by Russian, Ukrainian, and Finnish volunteers for the German military as a result of her connection to partisans; and the arrival of the German military at the partisan camp.
Oral history interview with Martin Boyko
Oral History
Martin Boyko, born in 1935, discusses life in Baranovichi, Belarus during the German occupation; peaceful relationships with Jews prior to the war; his fear of walking the streets because of his Jewish appearance; villagers' comments about Germany as a safe alternative to Soviet rule; the introduction of restrictions on Jews; the establishment of the Jewish ghetto in 1942; the guarding the ghetto by policemen; sneaking through the ghetto fence to play with Jewish children; the understanding among Jewish children that they would be deported; the mass killing of Jews in the summer of 1943 by German forces; being mistaken as a Jew during the organization of a procession; being forced to join the procession of Jews until his mother confirmed his Catholicism; hearing shooting, lasting more than two hours, from behind the railroad bridge; seeing bodies covered with soil and in a trench at the railroad construction site; hearing moans and seeing movement under the soil; seeing prisoners of war in a car at the town square; the hanging in the town square of men, women, and children who were labeled with tags indicating “partisan” or “bandit”; his belief that Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Lithuanian policemen were more cruel than the German police; sneaking into the military prisoner camp to deliver bread to prisoners and receiving toys in return; and his memory of German soldiers removing corpses from a train carrying prisoners of war.
Oral history interview with Anastasia Vasilevich
Oral History
Anastasia Vasilevich, born in 1933 in Khoroshki, Belarus, discusses life in the village during the German occupation; a Jewish settlement outside the village; villagers’ aid to withdrawing Soviet troops; witnessing the murder of the Jewish population by German soldiers; the looting of Jewish-owned homes by villagers; her memories of the kindness of her Jewish neighbors; German soldiers torturing her father, communists, and other villagers to obtain information on partisans; her father’s death during a mass killing in Novogrudok; a survivor’s description of the killing, including her father’s defiance of German rule; a village head who denounced partisans to the German authorities; the killing of a partisan who was set on fire in his house; nearly being shot after she refused to provide a German soldier with eggs; and the killing of four German soldiers by partisans.
Oral history interview with Anna Vasilevich
Oral History
Anna Vasilevich, born in 1929 in the village of Bolshaya Kolpenitsa, discusses life during the German occupation; the destruction of Malaya Kolpenitsa village by the German forces; seeing military prisoners inside a fenced area at the military camp; the absence of Jews in Bolshaya Kolpenitsa prior to the war; purchasing items from Jews in Baranovichi; the kindness of Jews in Baranovichi; witnessing soldiers in black uniforms hang a man, possibly involved with partisans, in the market place; processions of Jews guarded by men in black uniforms; transports of Jews to an execution site; an incident in which a baby thrown from a truck and was picked up by a teacher who hid the child; seeing the ground move at the site of a mass grave; the suicide of a partisan who refused to surrender to German forces; being able to obtain Russian prisoners of war for farm work; the lack of any Jewish survivors; and the detention of German soldiers in nearby camps following liberation.
Oral history interview with Yadviga Petukhovskaya
Oral History
Yadviga Petukhovskaya, born in 1931 in Navahrudak, discusses life during the German occupation of Belarus; peaceful relationships with Jews prior to the war; the bombing of the town; her brother’s friendship with a neighboring Jewish boy; seeing a procession of Jews, guarded by German soldiers, walking to the ghetto; open access to the ghetto on Peresek Street; seeing the bodies of two people who attempted to escape the Pereseka ghetto; the severe conditions of the second ghetto on Minskaya Street; witnessing a shooting of a group Jews by German soldiers and police in a market place in summer 1941; Jewish women being forced to wash blood off pavestones; delivering food to a family friend in the Minskaya Street ghetto; seeing policemen in black uniforms bring a group children, who were possibly in hiding, to the ghetto; a policeman’s attack on her mother because she wanted to give water to the children; the transfer of Jews in the ghetto to Litovka where they would be executed; watching German soldiers shoot 60 people, mostly Polish male intelligentsia; and identifying exhumed bodies after the war.
Oral history interview with Vladimir Bubnovich
Oral History
Vladimir Bubnovich, born in Lyubcha, Belarus in 1932, discusses life during the German occupation; positive relations with the Jews prior to the war; partisan activity; hiding in the forest after Vlasovtsy soldiers set Lyubcha on fire; the surrender of Vlasovtsy soldiers after partisans set fire to the butter factory where they were hiding; partisans hanging Vlasovsty soldiers in the Lyubcha square; seeing a procession of Jews under German guard in the summer of 1942; the ghetto in Lyubcha; his sister’s desire to hide Jews; his uncle’s description of an execution at the cemetery; watching from his house as German soldiers shot a large groups of Jews by pits; German soldiers shooting cannons at a Jew who escaped the execution by swimming across the Neman River; the participation of local policemen and civilians with the Germans; the relocation of the town’s young men to a camp outside Minsk; his brother’s escape from the camp with a neighbor; partisan roundups of Germans at the end of the war; the shooting of the partisan commander by a German woman; the partisan execution of the woman and the soldiers; and the absence of Jews in Lyubcha after the war.
Oral history interview with Pavel Mashchonsky
Oral History
Pavel Mashchonsky, born in 1930 in Turets, Belarus, discusses life during the German occupation; peaceful relationships between Jews and non-Jews prior to the war; increasing restrictions on Jews; Jews being forced to perform manual labor jobs under the occupation; seeing Jews being collected in the town square and guarded by policemen wearing black uniforms; young village men being deported to a camp in Minsk; the transport of the remaining Jews to an execution site; seeing Jews being forced to undress by a pit before they were shot by policeman; villagers covering the pit with soil; an incident in which German soldiers shot a Jewish woman hiding in a well; public hangings; hearing about drunk partisans shooting columns of German soldiers as they passed through the village; policemen from neighboring villages inhabiting Jewish-owned homes after the mass execution; the retreat of local policemen along with German troops; and the return of Jews who had been sent to the camp in Minsk.
Oral history interview with Olga Maschonskaya
Oral History
Olga Mashchonskaya, born in 1934 in Turets, discusses life during the German occupation; purchasing food from Jewish-owned businesses prior to the war; bombings leading up to the German occupation; living close to the cemetery that was used as an killing site for Jews; policemen collecting clothing in horse carts following the mass killing of the area’s Jews; seeing only policemen and not German soldiers participate in the killing; and visiting the mass burials in the weeks that followed the event.
Oral history interview with Raisa Semashko
Oral History
Raisa Semashko, born in Minsk in 1930, discusses her family’s peaceful relationships with Jews prior to the war; the bombings and destruction of homes in Minsk during the war; German soldiers prohibiting her from leaving Minsk as a refugee; witnessing German soldiers shoot prisoners of war in a procession; living conditions for prisoners of war being held in Tchelyuskintsev Park; a prisoner of war who hid in her yard after escaping a procession; women bringing food to German soldiers and helping some prisoners of war; German authorities sending prisoners of war to concentration camps; the participation of Ukrainian policemen in the execution of Jews; hiding two Jewish girls, Ida Borshcheva and Nina Zeitlina, and Russian policemen in her family apartment; German forces gathering Jews into Russian homes; the Zamkovaya Street ghetto; hearing gunshots during an execution; a woman working for the NKVD hiding in a Russian orphanage; how the only Jewish survivors in the area were the individuals who had hid in her house; a German officer’s girlfriend who leaked information to her brother, a member of a clandestine group; the fragmentation of underground groups in Minsk; families being killed because of their communist ties; and seeing the dead bodies of prisoners of war alongside the street.
Oral history interview with Galina Bodanovich
Oral History
Galina Bodanovich, born in Oshmyany (Ashmiany), Belarus in 1937, discusses her mother’s friendship with Jews prior to the war; moving into the home of a Jewish woman who asked her family to keep it safe until she could return home; seeing Jewish acquaintances being transported in a truck with German guards; hearing gunfire coming from Yagelovshchina (IAgelovshchina, Belarus) and Lyugovshchina, Belarus; after the shooting ended, traveling to the killing site with her mother and other villagers; seeing a mass grave in which the soil still moved; the number of Jews from Oshmyany who survived the war; villagers taking property from Jewish-owned homes; hearing about Jewish families hiding in khutors and returning after the war; and the names of survivors who returned after the war.
Oral history interview with Gelena Stashkevich
Oral History
Gelena Stashkevich, born in 1933 in the village of Galiny, Belarus, discusses the absence of Jews in the village; her familiarity with Jews who worked in shops in Oshmyany (Ashmiany, Belarus) prior to the German occupation; the forced relocation of Jews to a ghetto in Oshmyany; seeing the burial pit at the Lyugovshchina execution site; guards who spoke in Russian forcing Jews to “graze” on grass around the pit; and hearing a long period of shooting after guards ordered her and other onlookers to leave the area.
Oral history interview with Stanislav Boltukho
Oral History
Stanislav Boltukho, born in 1931 in Dolginovo, Belarus discusses prewar relationships among nationalities in Dolginovo; his Jewish classmates and friends; the German invasion; the increasingly harsh treatment of Jews; the Centroviki, an armed unit of men who lived in the center of town and helped the Germans and local police relocate Jews to the ghetto; German soldiers blocking the town and shooting Jews on his street; a neighboring Christian girl who was shot by soldiers after she refused to leave her attic; his father’s recruitment to transport bodies to the cemetery; the composition of soldiers and guards, which included Estonians, Lithuanians, and Germans; a procession of Jews being forced to march from the ghetto towards an execution site; orders for the victims to undress upon entering a shed, which was then set on fire; the escape of several Jews from the ghetto and their survival in nearby villages; a local Catholic priest who hid Jews; witnessing a Jewish girl being shot allegedly because she walked outside of the boundaries; his father’s discovery of a man named Leiba Perevozkin hiding in his hay shed; an incident in which a German guard whipped his mother after she fed Russian military prisoners; the use of a church building as an interment site for military prisoners; the relocation of the military prisoners to Vileyka; witnessing German soldiers shoot two escaping military prisoners; his family’s aid to a military prisoner who was found on the road unconscious; and Jews who returned after the war.
Oral history interview with Arkady Zmachinskiy
Oral History
Arkady Zmachinskiy, born in 1928 in Stolbtsy, Poland (Stoŭbtsy, Belarus), discusses the large prewar Jewish population; peaceful relationships among nationalities before the war; seeing BUND soldiers marching through town; the Polish government discouraging patronage of Jewish-owned businesses; the closing of Jewish stores following the German invasion of Poland; the entry of Soviet troops into Poland; Jewish refugees from Southern Poland relocating to Stolbsty; the arrival of German soldiers in Stolbtsy; his grandfather who was killed by German soldiers; the order for Jews to wear Star of David badges; curfews for Jews; the resettlement of Jews into the ghetto; the guarding of the ghetto by local policemen; the looting of Jewish-owned homes by local citizens; forced manual labor; his views about the brutality of Latvian and Lithuanian soldiers; young Jews relocating to Baranovichi for work and never returning; the burning of her family’s home; living in a small building that overlooked the ghetto; hiding 10 Jews in their attic during the first execution; how after the Jews left the hiding place, they joined a Jewish partisan unit under Tuvia Belskiy’s in Nalibotskaya Pushcha; the arrival of SD soldiers; seeing elderly Jews from the ghetto being forced into trucks and then driven to the northwest part of town; hearing about the execution of elderly Jews; the participation of policemen in the shooting of young Jews in the second round of executions in 1943; the fact that the only Jewish survivors were those that had joined the partisans; the bodies of German soldiers after a conflict with partisans; his autobiography containing details about the Jews of Stolbtsy; and the return of some local Jews to town for a short time after the war.
Oral history interview with Ivan Tishkevich
Oral History
Ivan Tishkevich, born in 1932 in Malkovichi, Belarus, discusses moving with his family from Malkovichi to Peschanka in 1936; his mother’s positions as a teacher and a local deputy; returning to Malkovichi to escape German forces who were targeting deputies; the presence of Jewish families in Malkovichi prewar; the participation of Polish and Belarusian police in executions, looting, and arson; the execution of nearly all of Malkovichi’s Jews in August 1941; hearing about men who escaped the execution site; seeing policemen taking jewelry from a Jewish woman’s body; policemen openly discussing details of the execution with neighbors; the execution of Jews who had been conscripted to work on the railroad; moving to a new house across the street from police headquarters in 1943; and the police chief’s disappearance after the war.
Oral history interview with Marija Zanko
Oral History
Marija Zanko, born in 1923 in the village of Lyusino, Belarus, discusses how her father and local villagers saved a Jewish neighbor from German soldiers; witnessing a hanging carried out by German soldiers in Gantsevichi; escaping to a khutor when German forces announced plans to set the village on fire to kill all suspected partisans; the capture of 80 men, including her husband and father-in-law, by German soldiers; her husband’s conscription to dig a pit for German soldiers; her husband’s release with five others after a village women pleaded with high ranking German officers whom she hosted in her home; being closely guarded by German soldiers as she and other women were made to chop wood in the forest; and seeing a crowd of onlookers watch as a German soldier shot a man caught in the forest.
Oral history interview with Yelena Bondar
Oral History
Yelena Bondar, born in 1924 in Lipniki, Belarus, discusses life in Gantsevichi during the German occupation; the large prewar Jewish population; peaceful relationships between Poles, Russians, and Belarusians before the war; the German invasion; the order for Jews to perform manual labor; seeing Jewish men in the ghetto pulling grass and being abused by German guards; seeing a procession of Jews being taken to an execution site; hearing gunshots and seeing a large pit in the forest outside of town; the story of a German soldier who fell in love with a Jewish woman; the looting of belongings from Jewish-owned homes by local citizens; villagers hiding themselves and their valuables during the German withdrawal; and the return of some Jews to the area after the war.
Oral history interview with Adam Shpudzeika
Oral History
Adam Shpudzelka, born in 1931 in Gorodnaya, discusses the prewar Jewish population; peaceful relationships between nationalities; discrimination against Jews by Polish authorities; gradual changes after the German invasion; the deportation of young girls to Germany for work; the relocation of Jews to the ghetto; local men digging pits on the outskirts of Gorodnaya; seeing a procession of Jews being taken to an execution site; hearing the sound of gunfire; the ability of some Jews to bribe police and escape to join the partisans; Jewish partisans setting former Jewish-owned houses on fire so local policemen could not occupy them; the death of citizens, mistaken to be partisans, from Pesovo khutur; the flight of prisoners of war to the forest where they joined partisan units; and the hanging of police commander Pavel Poleshko after the war.
Oral history interview with Valentina Miksha
Oral History
Valentina Miksha, born in 1933 in Gorodnaya, discusses the prewar Jewish population in Gorodnaya; her many Jewish neighbors; the beginning of the war and the arrival of German forces; the relocation of the Jews to a ghetto; being caught by a policeman when attempting to sneak bread into the ghetto; the looting of Jewish-owned homes by local citizens; a procession of Jews being taken from the ghetto to an execution site; witnessing the shooting of Jews by German soldiers and local policemen; attempts at escape by some of the victims; her father being ordered to dig and then cover up the pit; the interrogation of her grandfather Ded Todusj who hid Jews in his field; and German forces burning down the village during their withdrawal.
Oral history interview with Marija Grichik
Oral History
Marija Grichik, born in 1928 in David-Gorodok, discusses the prewar Jewish community in David-Gorodok; peaceful relations among ethnic groups before the war; the German occupation; the removal of Jewish men to forced labor; the relocation of women, the elderly, and children to the special ghetto in Stolin; the order for 10-15 local Belarusian men to dig two large pits in a field; the execution of all the Jews in the ghetto; the looting of Jewish belongings by German soldiers, policemen, and local citizens; the execution of a policeman who hid his Jewish identity and helped Jews; the execution of Jewish women who escaped the ghetto and attempted to join the partisans; her attempt to help a Jewish woman whom she found hiding near her home; her father’s fear that their family would be killed if found giving aid to the woman; the differences between the regular police in blue uniforms who kept order in the town and the Wachman force in black which punished the local population under German control; and the postwar trial and incarceration of police by the Soviets.
Oral history interview with Alexandra Novik
Oral History
Alexandra Novik, born in 1926 in Kholma, discusses the prewar Jewish population; peaceful relationships with the Jewish community before the war; the arrival of German forces in 1941; the bombing of Ozarichy and Kholma; seeing Jews being gathered outside a home; hearing shooting from the direction of the execution site; policemen executing a woman who was discovered hiding with her baby; seeing a member of the town’s council being taken away by policemen and later hearing shots; and participating in the destruction of Jewish homes for firewood.
Oral history interview with Vera Chernyavskaya
Oral History
Vera Chernyavskaya, born in 1926 in Kholma, discusses the prewar Jewish population; the survival of Jews who joined the partisans; the execution of the town's remaining Jews; witnessing Jewish and Belarusian citizens suffering under the German occupation; the burning of villages; her own experience in which soldiers locked her and other refugees in a shed in Chistoluzhye and set it on fire; their rescue by Soviet forces from the shed; seeing the bodies of Jews who were killed in their houses in Ozarichy; and how her parents hid a Jewish family until they could safely transfer them a partisan unit.
Oral history interview with Alexander Pinchuk
Oral History
Alexander Pinchuk, born in 1932 in the village Malije Litvinovichi, Belarus, discusses the closing the local school by German authorities; a Jewish neighbor who was killed by a policeman; his family’s relocation to an internment camp; the horrible living conditions in the camp where many prisoners died from lack of food; and the liberation of the camp by the Red Army.
Oral history interview with Vladimir Melnikov
Oral History
Vladimir Melnikov, born in 1930 in Ozarichi, discusses the large prewar Jewish community in Ozarichi; peaceful relations between non-Jews and Jews; the looting of Jewish-owned belongings by German soldiers at the start of the war; two local policemen who, on orders from German authorities; shot Jews in their homes; Jewish friends who were hiding in his family’s shed; the fate of his friends’ family members; the escape of his friends to partisans units; his reunion with his friends after the war; seeing bodies on the streets and inside houses; policemen searching for Jews and looting valuables; seeing policemen shoot an elderly Jewish woman and her grandson who were hiding in a house; locals from Novoselki looting Jewish-owned belongings; escaping a deportation to Germany in 1943; the concentration camp in Ozarichi; the death of prisoners from lack of food; the horrible living conditions in the camp; his mother’s survival; and liberation by the Red Army.
Oral history interview with Darya Lyogkaya
Oral History
Darya Lyogkaya, born in 1929 in the village of Visokiy Polk, Belarus, discusses her Jewish childhood friends; attending school in Parichi; prewar peaceful relations between non-Jews and Jews; the German invasion and bombing of the town; the brutality of German soldiers; incidents in which citizens turned in their neighbors for alleged partisan activities; the execution of suspected partisans and their families; witnessing a roundup of Jews at a hotel; seeing trucks full of Jews and later hearing gunfire; a Jewish friend who survived the mass killing and escaped to Moiseyevka; the burning of the burial pits as Russians forces approached in 1944; being taken with other children to a work camp; attempting to escape the camp; working at the school for German students; and returning to Visokiy Polk after the war.
Oral history interview with Anna Zinovich
Oral History
Anna Zinovich, born in 1933 in Mogilev, Belarus, discusses the establishment of “forbidden zones” from which citizens were forced to resettle during the German occupation; a cemetery in which carloads of bodies were buried in pits made by bombings; hearing gunshots after German soldiers take a group of Jews to an empty house; the betrayal of a Jewish family on her street by neighbors; the shooting of the family in their home by German soldiers; a family that moved into the house; witnessing a German soldier shoot a man whom he suspected of being Jewish based on the man’s physical features; and hearing about the hanging of Jewish children in Svisloch.
Oral history interview with Eva Drozdova
Oral History
Eva Drozdova, born in 1935, discusses her father’s prewar friendships with Jews from Silebia; moving to Bobruysk, Belarus; hiding in the forest in Grabovo, Belarus for several days at the start of the war; her view that the Russian gendarmes were more brutal than the Germans; being interrogated by gendarmes after a neighbor accused her of stealing goats for partisans; the forced resettlement of Jews to Turenskaya Street, a large originally Jewish street; numbers tattooed onto the forearms of Jews; Jews burying valuables and documents; neighbors who served the German occupation; the relocation of the area’s Jews to Kamenka, Belarus; being taken with her mother to Kamenka when they were falsely identified as Jews by neighbors; being taken with her mother to an execution site from which they were rescued by a soldier who was a former classmate of her mother’s; seeing flames from the execution site; the absence of Jews in town after 1943; seeing a truckload of children who were being taken for blood donations; and her brother’s death from an explosive grenade.
Oral history interview with Zinaida Shlichtova
Oral History
Zinaida Shlihktova, born in 1934 in the village of Falevich (possibly Falevichy, Homel'skaia voblasts', Belarus), discusses the burning of her village in October 1943; hiding with her family in their house as German military vehicles surrounded the village; the death of several members of her family who were shot in their home; and escaping the attack with only her mother and aunt.
Oral history interview with Valentina Rusakova
Oral History
Valentina Rusakova, born in 1930 in Kamenka village, discusses the German invasion; the brutal treatment of military prisoners; the relocation of the military prisoners to Bobruysk; her father who was taken to bury the bodies of prisoners of war; watching from a window as German soldiers tortured Jews in a nearby yard; the shooting of Armenians who were begging for food; the burning of a fortress that held military prisoners; a mass killing of Jews near a radio station building; the billeting of Hungarian forces in her house in 1943; the brutality of the Hungarian soldiers; two German soldiers who worked clandestinely for the partisans; a German soldier who saved her brother from being detained by local citizens who volunteered for the German authorities; and the burning of the remains of military prisoners and Jews by German forces.
Oral history interview with Tatjana Fedorenko
Oral History
Tatjana Fedorenko, born in 1929 in the Ukraine, describes her childhood; her family's move to Belarus; living in Smolevitchi; her father's work for the NKVD; the torture of her mother by German soldiers; living in emptied Jewish owned homes; assistance received by her family from partisans; the deportation of her sibilings to work in Germany; witnessing a roundup and procession of Jews in 1942; the Jewish ghetto; witnessing German soldiers executing partisans; witnessing a shooting of Jews by German soldiers and local policemen; the distribution of looted Jewish owned belongings to local townspeople; the her deportation along with her mother to Poland; their forced labor; and their liberation at the end of the war.
Oral history interview with Valentsina Ustsinova
Oral History
Valentsina Ustsinova, born in 1932 in Mstislavl, Belarus, describes the arrival of German forces; the mass murder of the Jewish community by German soldiers and local townspeople; local Jews who went into hiding; the looting of Jewish owned belongings by townspeople; the execution of partisans; and the deaths of her siblings.
Oral history interview with Aleksey Stsepanov
Oral History
Aleksey Stsepanov, born in 1928 in Ugli, Belarus, describes the Jewish community of Tchernievka; the arrival of German forces; the deportation of young adults to Germany; conditions for the Jewish community under the German occupation; mass shootings of Jews by German soldiers; the looting of Jewish owned belongings by local townspeople; aiding a partisan member; and his participation in the construction of a memorial to wartime victims.
Oral history interview with Nina Kashlatch
Oral History
Nina Kashlatch, born in 1932 in Grodzyanka, Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of Grodzyanka; German soldiers terrorizing local civilians; the establishment of a Jewish ghetto; the mass murder of the Jewish community in 1942; Jews who were able to go into hiding and survived the war; the cruelty of Ukraian soldiers; actions of local partisans; the looting of Jewish owned belongings by local townspeople; and the destruction of her village in 1943.
Oral history interview with Galina Kazatchionok
Oral History
Galina Kazatchionok, born in 1932 in Anatolyevka, Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of Anatolyevka; her family sheltering Jews during the war; hiding with her family in the nearby forest, the execution in the forest of a Jewish couple who were sheltered by her family; her family's involvement with the Partisans; witnessing the execution of military prisoners by German soldiers; and the punishment of local collaborators after the war.
Oral history interview with Valentsina Gudey
Oral History
Valentsina Gudey, born in 1930 in Vetka, Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of Vetka; the beginning of the war; life under German occupation; a roundup and convoy of Jews by led by German soldiers; a mass shooting of Jews by German soldiers; the looting of Jewish owned belongings; local collaborators; actions taken by townspeople to avoid being taken to work in Germany; the retreat of German forces; the liberation of Vetka; and starvation suffered immediately after the war.
Oral history interview with Zinaida Tchernyuk
Oral History
Zinaida Tchernyuk, born in 1928 in Zaturgi, Poland (present day Belarus), describes the prewar Jewish community of Zaturgi; the arrival of German forces; fear of local partisan units; the mass shooting of Jews by German soldiers; and the distribution of Jewish owned homes to local townspeople after the war.
Oral history interview with Zinaida Yantchevskaya
Oral History
Zinaida Yantchevskaya, born in 1932 in Soltanovshchina, Belarus, describes her family; the prewar Jewish community of Soltanovschina; life under the German occupation; a child who was almost killed because he was thought to be Jewish; details of a mass murder of Jews by German soldiers; and a Jewish woman who hid in her village.
Oral history interview with Nikolay Ulasik
Oral History
Nikolay Ulasik, born in 1926 in Stolbtsy, Poland (present day Belarus), describes the prewar Jewish community of Stolbtsy; life under the German occupation; the establishment of the Jewish ghetto; conditions for the Jewish community under the German occupation; his involvement with local partisan units; a mass shooting of Jews; the poor treatment of townspeople by local policemen; the mass execution of captured partisans; and a fire in Stolbtsy.
Oral history interview with Tatyana Kalashnikova
Oral History
Tatyana Kalashnikova, born in 1930 in Stolbtsy, Poland (present day Belarus), describes the prewar Jewish community of Stolbtsy; the looting of Jewish owned shops by Soviet forces and local policemen in 1939; arrests made by the NKVD; the burning of her town; the treatment of local townspeople by German soldiers and by partisan members; Jewish families joining the partisan movement; restrictions placed upon the Jewish community under the German occupation; the establishment of a Jewish ghetto; and the execution of Jews by German soldiers and local policemen in 1942.
Oral history interview with Dmitriy Zmatchinskiy
Oral History
Dmitriy Zmatchinskiy, born in 1935 in Belarus, describes arrival of German forces; the construction of the Jewish ghetto and other restrictions placed upon the Jewish community under the German occupation; local collaborators; the execution of local Jews in 1942; and the looting of Jewish owned beloingings by townspeople.
Oral history interview with Larisa Pribysh
Oral History
Larisa Pribysh, born in 1932 in Stolbtsy, Poland (present day Belarus), describes the prewar Jewish community of her hometown; the establishment of the Jewish ghetto; selling food to Jews in the ghetto; a group of Jews who attempted to start a fire in the ghetto to cover their escape; roundups and shootings of Jews by local policemen; townspeople looting the mass grave; and witnessing the murder of her Jewish girlfriend by a local policeman.
Oral history interview with Arkadiy Shkuran
Oral History
Arkadiy Shkuran, born in 1934 in Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of his hometown; the involvement of his family with the partisan movement; hiding two Jews; local collaborators; witnessing the killing of his father and other family members by German soldiers; the destruction of his hometown to create a labor camp in 1943; his deportation to Ozarichi concentration camp; the deaths of his grandmother and aunt in Ozarichi concentration camp; and his liberation from the camp.
Oral history interview with Michail Karpuk
Oral History
Michail Karpuk, born in 1930 in Belarus, describes the conditions for the Jewish community in Vysokovskiy during the German occupation, including the creation of a ghetto; a shooting of Jews in the ghetto in 1942; the deportation of Jews to Treblinka concentration camp; local collaborators; and German soldiers living in Jewish owned homes.
Oral history interview with Regina Lavrovich
Oral History
Regina Lavrovich, born in 1933 in Osavetz, Belarus, describes the communist leanings of her family; the prewar Jewish community of Osavetz; the treatment of local townspeople by German soldiers; the destruction of her village in 1942; living in the forest in 1943; her transfer to a displaced persons camp and then prisons in Babruisk and Minsk; and her relocation to work in Germany.
Oral history interview with Evgeniy Novitskiy
Oral History
Evgeniy Novitskiy, born in 1932 in Zmejovka, Belarus, describes the arrival of German forces; his father and brother joining partisan forces; the deportation of his family to Ozarichi concentration camp and the death of several family members there; and his liberation from the camp and stay in a hospital after the war.
Oral history interview with Mariya Akola
Oral History
Mariya Akola, born in 1934 in Belica, Belarus, describes the treatment of local townspeople by German soldiers during occupation; the mass shooting of the Jewish population; his deportation to Ozarichi concentration camp; the death of his mother and two brothers; the liberation of the concentration camp; and his life after the war.
Oral history interview with Lidia Atrashkevitch
Oral History
Lidia Atrashkevich, born in 1931 in Cholma, Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of Ozarichi; a mass shooting of Jews; her deportation to Ozarichi concentration camp in 1943, where many of her siblings died; and her liberation from the concentration camp.
Oral history interview with Mikchail Gigo
Oral History
Mikchail Gigo, born in 1926 in Belarus, describes the prewar Jewish community of Voloknovichi village; German soldiers confiscating his family's livestock; the Jewish ghetto in Novogrudk; the mass murder of the Jewish population; his arrest in 1942 and escape; and his work with a partisan unit.
Oral history interview with Leokadiya Tcherviak
Oral History
Oral history interview with Vera Perepecha
Oral History
Oral history interview with Zenon Pudakevich
Oral History
Oral history interview with Yadviga Yoda
Oral History
Oral history interview with Nina Bychko
Oral History
Oral history interview with Lidia Radyuk
Oral History
Oral history interview with Artemiya Tchurilo
Oral History
Oral history interview with Cheslav Yarmolovich
Oral History
Oral history interview with Aleksey Kozhukh
Oral History
Oral history interview with Mariya Pavlyukovich
Oral History
Oral history interview with Fiodor Pavlyukovich
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Oral history interview with Anna Derachits
Oral History
Oral history interview with Nadezhda Antonovich
Oral History
Oral history interview with Gennadiy Parkhomenko
Oral History
Oral history interview with Gennadiy Kezhev
Oral History
Oral history interview with Valentin Lukinykh
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Oral history interview with Pyotr Borzdov
Oral History
Oral history interview with Franya Tsodova
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Oral history interview with Anna Podstennaya
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Oral history interview with Ivan Gavrilovitch
Oral History
Oral history interview with Yevgeniya Lavrenova
Oral History
Oral history interview with Ivan Bout
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Oral history interview with Tamara Lipenj
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Oral history interview with Vladimir Rizo
Oral History
Oral history interview with Olga Rossolaj
Oral History
Oral history interview with Neonila Linich
Oral History
Neonila Linich, born in 1932 in the town of Knyazhitsy, Belarus, describes having Jewish neighbors and classmates; half of the population being Jewish; hearing from a history teacher about the start of the war; tanks approaching from the west; Germans tearing apart a flag and using pieces of it for scarves; Germans imposing their own rule and saying their race was the best one; older Jews being driven to a swamp where she heard shootings, and people calling it an execution; Germans tearing pages out of books; and a neighbor making a dugout for a hiding place when Germans were moving toward Russia.
Oral history interview with Marija Lohmakova
Oral History
Marija Lohmakova, born in 1929 in the town of Buda-Kashalyova in the Gomel Region of Belarus, describes many Jewish families living in the town; all Jews being collected and being brought to a school building and having to wear white stars; the school having no sleeping facilities; how she came from a poor family; and seeing bodies of Jewish people who had been executed in rows by shootings and left in the snow without being buried.
Oral history interview with Pelageja Dmitruchina
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Oral history interview with Nikolaj Brujlo
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Oral history interview with Mikhail Kolonchuk
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Oral history interview with Ivan Zhirko
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Oral history interview with Vasilij Shknaj
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Oral history interview with Liudmila Lutskina
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Oral history interview with Kleopatra Butsko
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Oral history interview with Janina Batjanovskaja
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Oral history interview with Marija Klimantovich
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Oral history interview with Cheslava Kondrat
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Research interview with Viktor Pogorelskiy
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Research interview with Nina Tatur
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Research interview with Leonid Kruzhalenko
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Research interview with Nikolay Starovoytov
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Research interview with Galina Savenko
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Research interview with Antonia Ryabukho
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Research interview with Valentina Tevyshova
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Research interview with Sofya Prokopchik
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Research interview with Martin Boyko
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Research interview with Anastasia Vasilevich
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Research interview with Anna Vasilevich
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Research interview with Yadviga Petukhovskaya
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Research interview with Vladimir Bubnovich
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Research interview with Pavel Mashchonsky
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Research interview with Raisa Semashko
Oral History
Research interview with Gelena Stashkevich
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Research interview with Stanislav Boltukho
Oral History
Research interview with Arkady Zmachinskiy
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Research interview with Ivan Tishkevich
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Research interview with Marija Zanko
Oral History
Research interview with Yelena Bondar
Oral History
Research interview with Adam Shpudzeika
Oral History
Research interview with Valentina Miksha
Oral History
Research interview with Marija Grichik
Oral History
Research interview with Alexandra Novik
Oral History
Research interview with Vera Chernyavskaya
Oral History
Research interview with Vladimir Melnikov
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Research interview with Darya Lyogkaya
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Research interview with Anna Zinovich
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Research interview with Eva Drozdova
Oral History
Research interview with Zinaida Shlichtova
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Research interview with Valentina Rusakova
Oral History
Research interview with Tatjana Fedorenko
Oral History
Research interview with Valentsina Ustsinova
Oral History
Research interview with Aleksey Stsepanov
Oral History
Research interview with Nina Kashlatch
Oral History
Research interview with Galina Kazatchionok
Oral History
Research interview with Valentsina Gudey
Oral History
Research interview with Zinaida Tchernyuk
Oral History
Research interview with Zinaida Yantchevskaya
Oral History
Research interview with Nikolay Ulasik
Oral History
Research interview with Tatyana Kalashnikova
Oral History
Research interview with Dmitriy Zmatchinskiy
Oral History
Research interview with Larisa Pribysh
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Research interview with Arkadiy Shkuran
Oral History
Research interview with Michail Karpuk
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Research interview with Regina Lavrovich
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Research interview with Evgeniy Novitskiy
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Research interview with Mariya Akola
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Research interview with Mikchail Gigo
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Research interview with Leokadiya Tcherviak
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Research interview with Vera Perepecha
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Research interview with Zenon Pudakevich
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Research interview with Yadviga Yoda
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Research interview with Nina Bychko
Oral History
Research interview with Lidia Radyuk
Oral History
Research interview with Artemiya Tchurilo
Oral History
Research interview with Cheslav Yarmolovich
Oral History
Research interview with Aleksey Kozhukh
Oral History
Research interview with Mariya Pavlyukovich
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Research interview with Anna Derachits
Oral History
Research interview with Nadezhda Antonovich
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Research interview with Gennadiy Parkhomenko
Oral History
Research interview with Gennadiy Kezhev
Oral History
Research interview with Valentin Lukinykh
Oral History
Research interview with Pyotr Borzdov
Oral History
Research interview with Franya Tsodova
Oral History
Research interview with Anna Podstennaya
Oral History
Research interview with Yevgeniya Lavrenova
Oral History
Research interview with Ivan Bout
Oral History
Research interview with Vladimir Rizo
Oral History
Research interview with Olga Rossolaj
Oral History
Research interview with Neonila Linich
Oral History
Research interview with Marija Lohmakova
Oral History