Advanced Search

Learn About The Holocaust

Special Collections

My Saved Research

Login

Register

Help

Skip to main content

Kindergarten children at the Reali Hebrew gymnasium in Kovno perform in a school play.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 14811

Search this record's additional resources, such as finding aids, documents, or transcripts.

No results match this search term.
Check spelling and try again.

results are loading

0 results found for “keyward

    Kindergarten children at the Reali Hebrew gymnasium in Kovno perform in a school play.
    Kindergarten children at the Reali Hebrew gymnasium in Kovno perform in a school play.

Among those pictured is Hana Trozki (front row, right).

    Overview

    Caption
    Kindergarten children at the Reali Hebrew gymnasium in Kovno perform in a school play.

    Among those pictured is Hana Trozki (front row, right).
    Date
    1933
    Locale
    Kaunas, Lithuania
    Variant Locale
    Kauen
    Kovno
    Kowno
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Sara Trozki Koper

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Sara Trozki Koper

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Hana Trozki was a Jewish teenager from Kovno. This photograph is one of a collection of prewar and ghetto images that she pasted into a multi-volume journal. She kept the collection throughout the war and buried it beneath the ghetto before going into hiding in the summer of 1944. Hana Trozki, who was a member of the Irgun Brit Zion Zionist youth movement, was among the approximately 2,000 Jews remaining in the Kovno ghetto in June 1944 after the mass deportation actions that were to have liquidated the ghetto. These Jews had evaded capture by escaping into a number of malinas (bunkers and other hiding places) in the ghetto. With the Red Army fast approaching the city, the Germans initiated an action on July 8, 1944 to "smoke out" the remaining Jews. Hana died in the action, but not before preparing a will indicating the three hiding places in which she had stowed the volumes of her journal. These were recovered by her sister, Sara Trozki (now Koper), who, together with her mother, had survived imprisonment in the Stutthof concentration camp and returned to Kovno in June 1945. Fearing the consequences of being caught by the Soviet authorities with the journal, Sara removed the photographs and burned the three notebooks containing the text of the journal. Sara and her mother were the only members of the immediate family to survive the war. Her father, Israel, and brother, Itzhak Zeev, perished in Dachau.
    Record last modified:
    2018-11-21 00:00:00
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/pa1054417

    Download & Licensing

    In-Person Research

    Contact Us