Difference between revisions of "Category:Hidden Children (subject)"
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'''Hidden Children of the Holocaust''' | [[File:1993 Marks.jpg|thumb|250px]] | ||
'''Hidden Children of the Holocaust''' (see [[Holocaust Children Studies]]) | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Belgium|Belgium]] -- [[Hidden Children, France|France]] -- [[Hidden Children, Italy|Italy]] -- [[Hidden Children, Netherlands|Netherlands]] -- [[Hidden Children, Poland|Poland]] | |||
* Read [https://www.ushmm.org/collections/bibliography/hidden-children Hidden Children (USHMM)] | * Read [https://www.ushmm.org/collections/bibliography/hidden-children Hidden Children (USHMM)] | ||
* See [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FF3p4xtC6I Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)] | * See [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FF3p4xtC6I Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)] | ||
* [https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories.html Yad Vashem] | |||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
Among the small | Among the small percentage of European Jewish children still alive at the end of the Holocaust, thousands survived because they were hidden. | ||
(a) Some were in hiding, alone or with relatives, in attics, cellars, etc. | (a) Some were in hiding, alone or with relatives, in attics, cellars, etc. | ||
Line 17: | Line 22: | ||
(e) Some joined partisan groups. | (e) Some joined partisan groups. | ||
== Countries == | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Albania]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Belarus]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Belgium]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Czechia]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, France]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Greece]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Hungary]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Italy]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Lithuania]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Netherlands]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Poland]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Slovakia]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Ukraine]] | |||
* [[Hidden Children, Yugoslavia]] | |||
== Book : ''The Hidden Children'' (1993), by Jane Marks == | |||
* Jane Marks, ''The Hidden Children: The Secret Survivors of the Holocaust'' (New York : Ballantine Books, 1993). | |||
"They hid wherever they could for as long as it took the Allies to win the war -- Jewish children, frightened, alone, often separated from their families. For months, even years, they faced the constant danger of discovery, fabricating new identities at a young age, sacrificing their childhoods to save their lives. These secret survivors have suppressed these painful memories for decades. Now, in The Hidden Children, twenty-three adult survivors share their moving wartime experiences -- some for the first time ... There is Rosa, who hid in an impoverished one-room farmhouse with three others, sleeping on a clay pallet behind a stove; Renee, who posed as a Catholic and was kept in a convent by nuns who knew her secret; and Richard, who lived in a closet with his family for thirteen months. Their personal stories of belief and determination give a voice, at last, to the forgotten. Inspiring and life-affirming, The Hidden Children is an unparalleled document of witness, discovery, and the miracle of human courage."--Publisher description. | |||
The ordeal -- The aftermath -- The legacy -- The healing -- A historical perspective : tracing the history of the hidden-child experience / by Nechama Tec -- The psychology behind being a hidden child / by Eva Fogelman. | |||
== Hidden Children and religious education== | == Hidden Children and religious education== | ||
Line 24: | Line 54: | ||
In the 1940s, European societies were profoundly religious. In order to be safe, "hidden children" had to pretend to be "Christian" by living as Christians. The difference between being and pretending, however, was not very easy to maintain. | In the 1940s, European societies were profoundly religious. In order to be safe, "hidden children" had to pretend to be "Christian" by living as Christians. The difference between being and pretending, however, was not very easy to maintain. | ||
Some children were old enough to understand it, and were helped by their non-Jews saviors to | Some children were old enough to understand it, and were helped by their non-Jews saviors to retain the memory and pride of their "hidden" identity. Some were simply too young to understand it, or were encouraged by their saviors to convert and became "Christians". Many children ended up to be baptized. At the end of the war, the problem of what to do with these children became dramatic. | ||
Generally speaking, the church discouraged the practice of forced baptism, although it accepted children who "spontaneously" asked for baptism or were | Generally speaking, the church discouraged the practice of forced baptism, although it accepted children who "spontaneously" asked for baptism or were offered to conversion by parents or grandparents. | ||
More controversial was the case in which Jewish children were baptized by Christian neighbors or servants. Starting from the eighteenth century and the pontificate of Benedict XIV (1740-1758), the Church | More controversial was the case in which Jewish children were baptized by Christian neighbors or servants. Starting from the eighteenth century and the pontificate of Benedict XIV (1740-1758), the Church issued very strict rules that paved the way for the removal of "baptized" minors from the natural authority of their parents. The Mortara case, dated 1858, is the most famous example. | ||
These norms had | These norms still had an impact after the Holocaust. Many of the Jewish children saved by Catholic families or Christian institutions had been baptized and educated in the Christian religion. Should they be returned to their parents or relatives or even to Jewish organizations in case they were orphaned? | ||
In 1946 there was a heated debate about this issue within the Catholic Church. Pious XII in 1946 supported the idea that the Jewish children should ''not'' be returned. Other important members of the church supported the opposite view. | In 1946 there was a heated debate about this issue within the Catholic Church. Pious XII in 1946 supported the idea that the Jewish children should ''not'' be returned. Other important members of the church supported the opposite view. Eventually, most of the children were returned, even though in some cases this meant separating them from the families who so generously had cared for them. For many of the "hidden children" they were the only parents they had ever known. The situation was very complex. Some of the children who had lived in Catholic Institutions refused to leave, some even became priests or nuns; some on the contrary left the priesthood when they discovered their Jewish roots. For many "hidden children", raised by non-Jewish families or guardians, the end of the war was either the happiest moment of their life or just another trauma. | ||
==Literature == | ==Literature == | ||
Line 41: | Line 71: | ||
"[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FF3p4xtC6I Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)]" (2003) is a documentary, directed by [[Aviva Slesein]]. | "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FF3p4xtC6I Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)]" (2003) is a documentary, directed by [[Aviva Slesein]]. | ||
Latest revision as of 14:26, 30 May 2021
Hidden Children of the Holocaust (see Holocaust Children Studies)
- Belgium -- France -- Italy -- Netherlands -- Poland
- Read Hidden Children (USHMM)
- See Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)
- Yad Vashem
Overview
Among the small percentage of European Jewish children still alive at the end of the Holocaust, thousands survived because they were hidden.
(a) Some were in hiding, alone or with relatives, in attics, cellars, etc.
(b) Some had false identity papers.
(c) Some were entrusted by their parents to Christian families or religious institutions.
(d) Some, left abandoned, survived as street children.
(e) Some joined partisan groups.
Countries
- Hidden Children, Albania
- Hidden Children, Belarus
- Hidden Children, Belgium
- Hidden Children, Czechia
- Hidden Children, France
- Hidden Children, Greece
- Hidden Children, Hungary
- Hidden Children, Italy
- Hidden Children, Lithuania
- Hidden Children, Netherlands
- Hidden Children, Poland
- Hidden Children, Slovakia
- Hidden Children, Ukraine
- Hidden Children, Yugoslavia
Book : The Hidden Children (1993), by Jane Marks
- Jane Marks, The Hidden Children: The Secret Survivors of the Holocaust (New York : Ballantine Books, 1993).
"They hid wherever they could for as long as it took the Allies to win the war -- Jewish children, frightened, alone, often separated from their families. For months, even years, they faced the constant danger of discovery, fabricating new identities at a young age, sacrificing their childhoods to save their lives. These secret survivors have suppressed these painful memories for decades. Now, in The Hidden Children, twenty-three adult survivors share their moving wartime experiences -- some for the first time ... There is Rosa, who hid in an impoverished one-room farmhouse with three others, sleeping on a clay pallet behind a stove; Renee, who posed as a Catholic and was kept in a convent by nuns who knew her secret; and Richard, who lived in a closet with his family for thirteen months. Their personal stories of belief and determination give a voice, at last, to the forgotten. Inspiring and life-affirming, The Hidden Children is an unparalleled document of witness, discovery, and the miracle of human courage."--Publisher description.
The ordeal -- The aftermath -- The legacy -- The healing -- A historical perspective : tracing the history of the hidden-child experience / by Nechama Tec -- The psychology behind being a hidden child / by Eva Fogelman.
Hidden Children and religious education
Christian families and institutions played a central role in protecting thousands of Jewish Children during the Holocaust. Thousands of "righteous among the nations" are recognized by the Institute Yad Vashem in Israel. Without the heroic commitment and sacrifice of non-Jewish rescuers, many more lives would have been lost.
In the 1940s, European societies were profoundly religious. In order to be safe, "hidden children" had to pretend to be "Christian" by living as Christians. The difference between being and pretending, however, was not very easy to maintain.
Some children were old enough to understand it, and were helped by their non-Jews saviors to retain the memory and pride of their "hidden" identity. Some were simply too young to understand it, or were encouraged by their saviors to convert and became "Christians". Many children ended up to be baptized. At the end of the war, the problem of what to do with these children became dramatic.
Generally speaking, the church discouraged the practice of forced baptism, although it accepted children who "spontaneously" asked for baptism or were offered to conversion by parents or grandparents.
More controversial was the case in which Jewish children were baptized by Christian neighbors or servants. Starting from the eighteenth century and the pontificate of Benedict XIV (1740-1758), the Church issued very strict rules that paved the way for the removal of "baptized" minors from the natural authority of their parents. The Mortara case, dated 1858, is the most famous example.
These norms still had an impact after the Holocaust. Many of the Jewish children saved by Catholic families or Christian institutions had been baptized and educated in the Christian religion. Should they be returned to their parents or relatives or even to Jewish organizations in case they were orphaned?
In 1946 there was a heated debate about this issue within the Catholic Church. Pious XII in 1946 supported the idea that the Jewish children should not be returned. Other important members of the church supported the opposite view. Eventually, most of the children were returned, even though in some cases this meant separating them from the families who so generously had cared for them. For many of the "hidden children" they were the only parents they had ever known. The situation was very complex. Some of the children who had lived in Catholic Institutions refused to leave, some even became priests or nuns; some on the contrary left the priesthood when they discovered their Jewish roots. For many "hidden children", raised by non-Jewish families or guardians, the end of the war was either the happiest moment of their life or just another trauma.
Literature
2003
"Secret Lives - Hidden Children And Their Rescuers During WWII (YouTube)" (2003) is a documentary, directed by Aviva Slesein.
Pages in category "Hidden Children (subject)"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 572 total.
(previous page) (next page)1
- Werner Epstein (M / Germany, 1923), Holocaust survivor
- Erika Felicitas Beyth (F / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor
- Emil Dortort (M / Germany, 1924-194?), Holocaust victim
- Walter Karliner (M / Germany, 1924), Holocaust survivor
- Manfred Vos (M / Germany, 1924-1943), Holocaust victim
- Irene Abraham (F / Germany, 1925), Holocaust survivor
- Heinz Berger (M / Austria, 1925), Holocaust survivor
- Louis Goldman (M / Germany, 1925-1996), Holocaust survivor
- Solomon Perel (M / Germany, Poland, 1925), Holocaust survivor
- Walter Strauss (M / Germany, 1925-1943), Holocaust victim
- Ruth Schütz Uzrad (F / Germany, 1925-2015), Holocaust survivor
- Edith Velmans (F / Netherlands, 1925), Holocaust survivor
- Aronne Amoday (M / Serbia, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Martin Axelrad (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Janina Lewinson / Janina Bauman (F / Poland, 1926-2009), Holocaust survivor
- Luna Ergas (F / Greece, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Simon Federman (M / France, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Moshe Flinker (M / Netherlands, 1926-1944), Holocaust victim
- Inge Helft (F / Germany, 1926-1943), Holocaust victim
- Herbert Karliner (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Jean-Marie Lustiger (M / France, 1926-2007), Holocaust survivor
- Eugene Moses / Gene Moser (M / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- David Plonski (M / Poland, 1926-2010), Holocaust survivor
- Ruth Salmon (F / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Gerda Samaskewitz (F / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Lore Alice Samson (F / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Felix Scherzer (M / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Stella Schnapp (F / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Ruth Strauss / Ruth Schloss (F / Germany, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Edith Weitz (F / Austria, 1926), Holocaust survivor
- Heinz Alexander (M / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Zyga Allweiss (F / Poland, 1927-2014), Holocaust survivor
- Henry Artz / Heinz Arzt (M / Austria, 1927-2001), Holocaust survivor
- Hans Benedick (M / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Joachim Bukofzer (M / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Clara Kramer (F / Poland, 1927-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Gerda Landsberger (F / Poland, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Yehoshua Neuwirth (M / Germany, 1927-2013), Holocaust survivor
- Esther Nisenthal Krinitz
- Oskar Pinkus (M / Poland, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Esther Rasch / Ester Fried (F / Hungary, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Moyshe Rekhtman
- Friedrich Springer (M / Austria, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Otto Wolf (M / Czechia, 1927-1945), Holocaust victim
- Elsa Wolff (F / Germany, 1927), Holocaust survivor
- Gidon Arye (M / Lithuania, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Vasco Calò
- Sergio Di Porto (M / Italy, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Abramo Dresdner
- Gisela Edel / Naomi Elath (F / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Vera Faludi (F / Bulgaria, Hungary, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Alexander Grothendieck (M / Germany, 1928-2014), Holocaust survivor
- Luigi Fleischmann (M / Italy, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- David Gewirtzman / Berl Losice (M / Poland, 1928-2012), Holocaust survivor
- David Hendel (M / Croatia, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Alice Jeruchim (F / France, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Tema Kaplan
- Adriana Luzzati Bassani (F / Italy, 1928-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Bernard Mayer
- Helmut Moses / Harvey Moser (M / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Mendel Rosenkranz (M / Poland, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Marco Salvadori (M / Italy, 1928-2010), Holocaust survivor
- Davide Schiffer (M / Italy, 1928-2020), Holocaust survivor
- Hans Simon Schonfrank (M / Germany, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Halina Schutz (F / Poland, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Cesare Segre (M / Italy, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Leo Silberman (M / Poland, 1928-2015), Holocaust survivor
- Eugene Sochor (M / Belgium, 1928-2015), Holocaust survivor
- Roberto Tagliacozzo (M / Italy, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Rene Weiss (F / Czechia, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Belcia Weissman / Belcia Pinkus (F / Poland, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Sabina Wylot
- Rosa Zarfati (F / Italy, 1928), Holocaust survivor
- Haim Amoday (M / Macedonia, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Zdenko Bergl (M / Croatia, 1929-2016), Holocaust survivor
- Marí Dawidowicz
- Fanny Findling (F / Germany, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Hindrich Horak (M / Czechia, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Eduard Izaks (M / Netherlands, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Simon Jeruchim (M / France, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Rivka Krol (F / Poland, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Szlama Kutnowski (M / Poland, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- François Lecomte (M / France, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Rose Lipszyc (F / Poland, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Manfred Mayer / Frederick Raymes (M / Germany, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Alice Menkes (F / Austria, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Sergio Minerbi (M / Italy, 1929-2019), Holocaust survivor
- Ruth Posner
- Wolfang Rotenberg (M / Germany, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Olek Czoban / Alexander Sarel (M / Poland, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Shmuel Shilo (M / Poland, 1929-2011), Holocaust survivor
- Ann Shore / Hania Goldman (F / Poland, 1929)
- Giuseppe Sorani (M / Italy, 1929-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Giacomo Varon (M / Italy, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Gertrude Vitriol (F / Slovakia, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Alicia Weinsberg / Alicja Fajnsztejn (F / Poland, 1929), Holocaust survivor
- Miko Zeller (M / Bosnia, 1929-1997), Holocaust survivor
- Henri Adlerstein
- Giovanni Abinum (M / Serbia, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Giovanni Albinum (M / Serbia, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Kurt Altstädter
- Herman Amsterdam
- Alicia Appleman-Jurman (F / Poland, 1930-2017), Holocaust survivor
- Carla Bachi (F / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Jacques Benderski
- Annette Bernay
- Nina Boniowna
- Rosa Brecher (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Marcel Bulka (M / Poland, 1930-1944), Holocaust victim
- Leon Buniak
- Hetty D'Ancona
- Janina David
- Walter Ehrlich (M / Slovakia, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Mietek Eichel
- Fanny Eil / Fanny Ben-Ami (F / Germany, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Cesare Moise Finzi (M / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Szyja Flajsz (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Bronislawa Goldfischer
- Marianne Adameczek (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Dorothy Greenstein / Devorah Kirszenbaum (F / Poland, 1930-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Gabriel Groszman
- Joseph Hirt (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Berndt Kaufman
- Ingrid Kisliuk / Inge Scheer (F / Austria, 1930-2020), Holocaust survivor
- Hermann Kremer (M / Croatia, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Menahem Kriegel (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Jan Kulbinger
- Berl Lieblein
- Leon Majblum (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Hans Helmut Michel (M / Germany, France, 1930-1944), Holocaust victim
- Jean Muller (M / France, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Yehuda Nir / Juliusz Gruenfeld (M / Poland, 1930-2014), Holocaust survivor
- Gualtiero Orvieto (M / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Kalman Perk (M / Lithuania, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Hanna Rawicz Keselman
- Eric Schwam (M / Austria, 1930-2020), Holocaust survivor
- Ariana Spiegel / Elisabeth Bellak (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Marianne Spier-Donati (F / Germany, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Regina Steinitz
- Lidka Stern (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Guido Tagliacozzo (M / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Vitaliano Trevi (M / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Eva Tuchsznajder (F / Belgium, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Pierre Vidal-Naquet (1930-2006), scholar
- Lea Weitzner
- Manfred Wildmann (M / Germany, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Henry Winkler
- Bogdan Wojdowski (M / Poland, 1930-1994), Holocaust survivor
- Adolphe Zdroui (M / France, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- David Zugman (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor
- Leo Michel Abrami (M / France, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Meri Adanja (F / Serbia, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Janina Altman / Janina Hescheles (F / Poland, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Sandro Anticoli (M / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Vittorio Emanuele Anticoli (M / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Graziella Bardavid (F / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Evelyn Bergl / Evelyn Arzt (F / Austria, 1931-2020), Holocaust survivor
- Edith Brandmann
- Maria Brieger
- Isacco Caviglia (M / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Franco Cesana (M / Italy, 1931-1944), Holocaust victim
- Manfred Degen (M / Germany, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Gregory Elper (M / Belarus, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Fred & Rolph Flatau (MM / Germany, 1931), Holocaust survivors
- Livio Fleischmann (M / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Irena Czoban / Aviva Fogelman (F / Poland, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Maurice Gerenstein (M / France, 1931-1944), Holocaust victim
- Harry Goldman (M / Germany, 1931-1948), Holocaust survivor
- Simon Gronowski (M / Belgium, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Suzanne Gross / Sarah Pertofsky (F / France, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Ernest Haar (M / Austria, 1931-2020), Holocaust survivor
- Alexander Halaunbrenner (M / France, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Joseph Joffo (France, 1931-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Mojzesz Kin
- Rachel Kokotek (F / France, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Josef Langnas (M / Austria, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Jacques Leibman / Isaac Lajbman (M / Belgium, 1931-2011), Holocaust survivor
- Lia Levi (F / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Irena Librowicz / Irit Amiel (F / Poland, 1931-2021), Holocaust survivor
- Henry Muller (M / France, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Walter Mundstein (M / Austria, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Emanuele Pacifici (M / Italy, 1931-2014), Holocaust survivor
- Rosa Pinczewski
- Josek Mansdorf (M / Poland, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Wiktoria Sliwowska
- Settimio Terracina (M / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- André Zalc (M / Belgium, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Elvira Zarfati (F / Italy, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Regina Zimmet (F / Germany, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Sidney Zoltak (M / Poland, 1931), Holocaust survivor
- Charlotte Adelman
- Aharon Appelfeld (M / Poland, 1932-2018), Holocaust survivor
- Alberto Astrologo (M / Italy, 1932), Holocaust survivor
- Aleksandra Berlowicz
- Eva Boros
- Henry Brecher (M / Austria, 1932), Holocaust survivor
- Krystyna Budnicka
- Rachel Buniak
- Aldo Di Castro (M / Italy, 1932-2004), Holocaust survivor
- Renato Di Castro (M / Italy, 1930), Holocaust survivor
Media in category "Hidden Children (subject)"
The following 58 files are in this category, out of 58 total.
- Walter Karliner.jpg 788 × 1,200; 127 KB
- Herbert Karliner.png 675 × 605; 417 KB
- Henri Vos.jpg 825 × 1,200; 235 KB
- 1947 Frank.jpg 250 × 383; 49 KB
- 1950 Frank de.jpg 386 × 600; 52 KB
- 1950 Frank fr.jpg 331 × 499; 24 KB
- 1952 Frank en.jpg 374 × 499; 25 KB
- 1965 Kosinski Jerzy.jpg 257 × 386; 38 KB
- 1972 Reiss.jpg 334 × 499; 38 KB
- 1983 Weinstein.jpg 307 × 500; 36 KB
- 1985 Weinstein.jpg 336 × 499; 27 KB
- 1986 Bauman.jpg 340 × 499; 31 KB
- 1988 Appleman.jpg 329 × 499; 39 KB
- 1988 Bauman.jpg 341 × 499; 27 KB
- 1990 Perel.jpg 324 × 499; 25 KB
- 1991 Muller.jpg 351 × 499; 29 KB
- 1993 Marks.jpg 322 × 499; 31 KB
- 1993 Pacifici.jpg 201 × 306; 6 KB
- 1994 Levi.jpg 333 × 500; 30 KB
- 1994 Miller.jpg 339 × 499; 24 KB
- 1994 Rosenberg.jpg 310 × 474; 31 KB
- 1994 Stein.jpg 296 × 474; 23 KB
- 1994 Treves.jpg 201 × 293; 4 KB
- 1995 Frank en.jpg 400 × 661; 218 KB
- 1995 Levi.jpg 187 × 266; 5 KB
- 1995 Machlin.jpg 310 × 475; 39 KB
- 1995 Zargani.jpg 319 × 499; 27 KB
- 1997 Maarsen en.jpg 1,920 × 2,560; 266 KB
- 1997 Rimini.jpg 336 × 499; 17 KB
- 1997b Winter.jpg 311 × 499; 24 KB
- 1998 Muller de.jpg 312 × 500; 29 KB
- 1999 Fleischmann.jpg 338 × 499; 15 KB
- 1999 Kustanowitz.jpg 371 × 499; 24 KB
- 2001 Velmans.jpg 290 × 474; 29 KB
- 2002 Ligocka.jpg 399 × 582; 63 KB
- 2002 Slesin (doc).jpg 1,000 × 1,422; 119 KB
- 2004 Bailly.jpg 326 × 499; 28 KB
- 2005 Millman.jpg 341 × 499; 30 KB
- 2006 Finzi.jpg 210 × 291; 10 KB
- 2008 Eilati en.jpg 333 × 499; 14 KB
- 2008 Rekhtman.jpg 343 × 500; 41 KB
- 2008 Vromen.jpg 333 × 499; 49 KB
- 2009 Abrams - Blaikie.jpg 375 × 499; 43 KB
- 2009 Bauman.jpg 318 × 499; 40 KB
- 2009 Bogner.jpg 337 × 499; 21 KB
- 2010 Bailly English.jpg 332 × 499; 31 KB
- 2011 Be-Ami.jpg 351 × 499; 30 KB
- 2012 Katz.jpg 333 × 499; 24 KB
- 2013 Calverley.jpg 331 × 499; 30 KB
- 2013 Modiano en.jpg 328 × 499; 37 KB
- 2015 Baker.jpg 386 × 499; 26 KB
- 2016 Doillon (film).jpg 768 × 1,024; 380 KB
- 2016 Weinzweig.jpg 324 × 499; 42 KB
- 2017 Lazarus.jpg 332 × 499; 30 KB
- 2017 Robinson.jpg 230 × 346; 18 KB
- 2017 Uzrad en.jpg 333 × 500; 41 KB
- 2021 Foa.jpg 1,000 × 1,414; 120 KB
- 2021 Lang Korn Goldig.jpg 440 × 655; 32 KB