Difference between revisions of "Tova Friedman (F / Poland, 1938), Holocaust survivor"
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(Created page with "Tova Friedman was born on Sep 10, 1938 in Poland, in a village near Lodz. Under Nazi occupation, the family was forced to live in ghettoes and then sent to concentration camps...") |
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Tova Friedman was born on Sep 10, 1938 in Poland, in a village near Lodz. Under Nazi occupation, the family was forced to live in ghettoes and then sent to concentration camps. At Auschwitz she avoided being sent to the death march by hiding with her mother beneath dead corpses. | Tova Friedman was born on Sep 10, 1938 in Poland, in a village near Lodz. Under Nazi occupation, the family was forced to live in ghettoes and then sent to concentration camps. At Auschwitz she avoided being sent to the death march by hiding with her mother beneath dead corpses. | ||
She appears in a famous photo shot after the liberation of the camp on January 27, 1945. | She appears in a famous photo shot after the liberation of the camp on January 27, 1945. The photo pictures: ( | ||
After the war, Tova and her mother were reunited with her father (he also miraculously survived). They came to the United States in 1950 | [[File:Auschwitz children2.jpg|thumb|500px]] | ||
After the war, Tova and her mother were reunited with her father (he also miraculously survived). They came to the United States in 1950. | |||
She was executive director of Jewish Family Service of Somerset, Hunterdon, and Warren Counties. | She was executive director of Jewish Family Service of Somerset, Hunterdon, and Warren Counties. |
Revision as of 14:56, 24 January 2020
Tova Friedman was born on Sep 10, 1938 in Poland, in a village near Lodz. Under Nazi occupation, the family was forced to live in ghettoes and then sent to concentration camps. At Auschwitz she avoided being sent to the death march by hiding with her mother beneath dead corpses.
She appears in a famous photo shot after the liberation of the camp on January 27, 1945. The photo pictures: (
After the war, Tova and her mother were reunited with her father (he also miraculously survived). They came to the United States in 1950.
She was executive director of Jewish Family Service of Somerset, Hunterdon, and Warren Counties.
Literature =
Her story is told in the book Kinderlager (1998)