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Group portrait of members of the extended Rudashevsky family in Vilna.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 14728

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    Group portrait of members of the extended Rudashevsky family in Vilna.
    Group portrait of members of the extended Rudashevsky family in Vilna. 

Among those pictured are Yitzhak Rudashevsky (front row left), his mother Rosa (second row, left, behind Yitzhak), his father Eli (second from the right), his cousin Yona Rudashevsky (front row, center), his uncle Zvi Yaakov Rudashevsky (back row wearing the hat).

    Overview

    Caption
    Group portrait of members of the extended Rudashevsky family in Vilna.

    Among those pictured are Yitzhak Rudashevsky (front row left), his mother Rosa (second row, left, behind Yitzhak), his father Eli (second from the right), his cousin Yona Rudashevsky (front row, center), his uncle Zvi Yaakov Rudashevsky (back row wearing the hat).
    Date
    Circa 1936
    Locale
    Vilnius, Lithuania
    Variant Locale
    Lithuania
    Wilno
    Wilna
    Vilna
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Cilia Jurer Rudashevsky

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Cilia Jurer Rudashevsky
    Source Record ID: Collections: 2004.441.1

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Cilia Rudashevsky (born Cilia Jurer) is the daughter of Avraham Jurer and Rosa Rudashevsky. Her parents, originally from Vilna, moved to the Soviet Union in 1932. They settled in Sverdlovsk in the Urals where Cilia was born on April 10, 1934. Three years later, Avraham was arrested during a Stalinist purge in Sverdlovsk and subsequently executed. Rosa and Cilia continued to live in Sverdlovsk until 1943, when they moved to Dzirzek, a small village in Uzbekistan. They remained there until the end of World War II. In 1945 they returned to Vilna for a brief period before making their way to the American Zone of Germany with the help of the Bricha. Rosa went to live in the Leipheim displaced persons camp, while Cilia settled in the Landsberg camp with other members of the Dror Zionist youth movement. She later joined her mother in Leipheim while awaiting an opportunity to immigrate to Palestine. In 1947 Rosa and Cilia were included among the 4,500 passengers of the illegal immigrant ship, the Exodus 1947. When the ship was intercepted and its passengers sent back to Germany, Rosa and Cilia spent two months in the Poppendorf displaced persons camp. When they were allowed to leave, they went briefly to Emden, before sailing to the newly declared State of Israel on board the ship Kedma. She passed away January 29, 2012.
    Record last modified:
    2005-02-11 00:00:00
    This page:
    http:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/pa1054158

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