Difference between revisions of "Nina Boniowna"
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'''Nina Boniowna''' (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor. | '''Nina Boniowna''' (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor. | ||
* KEYWORDS : <[[Warsaw Ghetto]]> <[[Aryan Side]]> | * KEYWORDS : <[[Warsaw Ghetto]]> <[[Hidden Children, Poland]]> <[[Aryan Side]]> | ||
* MEMOIRS : ''The Children Accuse'' (1946), 7-11. | * MEMOIRS : ''The Children Accuse'' (1946), 7-11. | ||
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== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
* [[Holocaust Survivor Testimonies, Poland]] #1528 | |||
Nina Boniowna (Boniowka) was born July 20, 1930 in Warsaw, Poland, to Aron and Fajga Cynksztajn. After the ghetto uprising, she was one of the few who managed to cross to the Aryan side. "I was living in a village right on the Vistula ... On January 15 1945 the victorious Red Army entered Warsaw. It was only then that I began to cry ... It was only now that I felt the absence of those dear to me, the lack of schooling and education." | |||
"The author was in the Warsaw ghetto. She lost her mother during the ghetto uprising. She was taken to the Aryan side and hid in the countryside until the end of the occupation. Liberation by the Red Army on January 15, 1945." | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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[[Category:Holocaust Children's Earliest Narratives (subject)|1930 Boniowna]] | [[Category:Holocaust Children's Earliest Narratives (subject)|1930 Boniowna]] | ||
[[Category:Holocaust Survivor Testimonies, Poland (subject)|1930 Boniowna]] | |||
[[Category:Hidden Children (subject)|1930 Boniowna]] | |||
[[Category:Hidden Children, Poland (subject)|1930 Boniowna]] |
Latest revision as of 04:58, 8 April 2023
Nina Boniowna (F / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor.
- KEYWORDS : <Warsaw Ghetto> <Hidden Children, Poland> <Aryan Side>
- MEMOIRS : The Children Accuse (1946), 7-11.
Biography
Nina Boniowna (Boniowka) was born July 20, 1930 in Warsaw, Poland, to Aron and Fajga Cynksztajn. After the ghetto uprising, she was one of the few who managed to cross to the Aryan side. "I was living in a village right on the Vistula ... On January 15 1945 the victorious Red Army entered Warsaw. It was only then that I began to cry ... It was only now that I felt the absence of those dear to me, the lack of schooling and education."
"The author was in the Warsaw ghetto. She lost her mother during the ghetto uprising. She was taken to the Aryan side and hid in the countryside until the end of the occupation. Liberation by the Red Army on January 15, 1945."