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  • ...tion of [[Kumranskaya obshchina (1983 Amusin), book]]. Translated from the Russian. [[Category:Translated from Russian|1986 Amusin]]
    808 bytes (96 words) - 07:19, 9 September 2015
  • ''' Juda Iskariot i drugie ''' <Russian> / ''Judas Iscariot'' (1907) is a novel by [[Leonid N. Andreyev]]. ...us and jealousy. Book three in a trilogy of psychological stories relating to the life of Jesus of Nazareth.
    1 KB (140 words) - 08:26, 16 November 2015
  • ...Russian front. He survived with his mother under false identity. Emigrated to Chile in 1957. ...rating to Chile; going to Argentina when he was 19 years old and returning to Chile; and his life in Chile.
    2 KB (234 words) - 12:34, 25 June 2021
  • ...orted him to Auschwitz concentration camp. He returned to Budapest in 1945 to find that his parents had also survived the war by hiding with Christian fr ...tion of 1956. When the revolution was failed he fled to Vienna, and thence to the United States.
    2 KB (219 words) - 19:58, 16 October 2020
  • ...d settled in Buenos Aires. Gabriel married Ruth Elbert in 1958. They moved to Florida in 2003.
    2 KB (219 words) - 17:59, 16 November 2020
  • ...y liberated on May 4, 1945. Upon his release, Lorand decided not to return to Hungary and his family. He began a new life, probably under a new identity.
    4 KB (601 words) - 15:12, 7 April 2023
  • ...ebruary 1945. Lajos was taken to a camp Poland and was supposed to be sent to Sobibor. However he and six other prisoners escaped and went in Kassa where ...ar house. A policeman saw them and offered to save Tibor, but Olga refused to give up her one surviving son. They lived in the ghetto, often starving, to
    4 KB (598 words) - 11:52, 16 November 2020
  • A sequel to [[Valtakunnan salaisuus (1959 Waltari), novel]]. *[[Az emberiség ellenségei (1984 Waltari / B Schütz), novel (Hungarian ed.)]]
    2 KB (207 words) - 20:20, 30 November 2019
  • ...e American zone in Germany; life in displaced persons camp; and her return to Ruscova in 1984. ...a displaced persons camp in 1947 after we left Auschwitz for the Governor to leave. Thank you again, Governor, for your show of support for the Jewish c
    2 KB (274 words) - 10:12, 22 February 2021
  • ...was reunited with his family only after the war. He left Hungary after the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and in 1957 settled in the United States, where he becam ...y march through Budapest under the blaring strains of prerecorded cheers...to the almost surreal scenes of young escapees securing the help of a hunchbac
    3 KB (548 words) - 14:11, 28 September 2020
  • ...in Simlul, Romania in 1930. When he was three years old, his family moved to Dobra, a small town near Satmar. The fact that they were the only Jewish fa ...rian army. While his father was gone, Oskar – being the oldest child – had to earn money for their family’s living.
    5 KB (904 words) - 10:53, 30 March 2021
  • ...he American Army during World War II. A committed socialist, he moved back to then East Germany in 1952 where he continued his literary work in spite of **[[Ahasvérus (1990 Heym / Makai Tóth), novel (Hungarian ed.)]]
    2 KB (245 words) - 08:38, 13 December 2020
  • ...the first scholarly treatments of Jesus as a Jew within Judaism. According to Flusser, "Jesus, or at least his message, was on the periphery of the Essen *[[Jézus az ókori zsidó történelem és irodalom tükrében (1995 Flusser), book (Hungarian ed.)]]
    2 KB (258 words) - 11:28, 6 November 2019
  • My name is Theresa Dulgov, and I am a Hungarian Holocaust survivor. I am one of the youngest Holocaust survivors since I wa ...all cost. And she prepared herself to leave the farm/ranch and try to get to Budapest where her mother was staying at that time.
    9 KB (1,642 words) - 13:41, 14 November 2020
  • ...Prague, Czechia. In 1944 he was deported to [[Auschwitz]], and from there to [[Monowitz-Buna]]. He survived a death march towards [[Buchenwald]], where ...k to Prague. In August 1945 he joined the [[Windermere Children]] and went to England. As an adult he became a famous professional bridge player.
    6 KB (839 words) - 13:27, 18 June 2021
  • ...eported to Auschwitz in 1944, he was then sent to Dora-Nordhausen and then to Bergen-Belsen, where he survived until liberation. ...mother and siblings; being sent with his father to Buchenwald; being sent to Dora; his father’s death in Dora; and being liberated by the British from
    7 KB (1,090 words) - 10:54, 30 March 2021
  • ...July 4, 1936 in Naples, Italy, to an Italian-Catholic father and a Jewish-Hungarian mother. ...id not swallow up Cesare Frustaci. Destiny, rather than crush him, submits to his rule.
    7 KB (1,193 words) - 11:11, 19 November 2020
  • ...el on November 21, 1930, in Bótrágy, Czechoslovakia (now Batrad’, Ukraine) to Meyer and Leah Fogel. Meyer owned a lumber yard, and Leah managed their hom ...ewish businesses, and required thousands of Jewish men to be inducted into Hungarian forced labor brigades under military command. Among them was Irene’s fath
    7 KB (1,237 words) - 07:49, 28 September 2020
  • ...remain alive with their mother in a labor camp. They were then transported to [[Theresienstadt]] where they were liberated. ...tto, which were divided by Hatvan Street. The Jews of the city were forced to build the wall of the ghetto, which stood 8.9 feet (2.7 m) high. On May 15
    10 KB (1,584 words) - 09:28, 13 September 2020
  • ...r; living in Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic with his sister; and immigrating to the United States in 1946. ...ains. His father owned a farm and a meat business, and his mother attended to the children and the home. Everyone in the family helped take care of the h
    10 KB (1,830 words) - 13:13, 30 May 2021

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