Difference between revisions of "Leon Prochnik"
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(Created page with "'''Leon Prochnik''' (M / Poland, 1931), Holocaust survivor * KEYWORDS: <Poland> <Refugees> <Lithuania><Soviet Union> <Japan> <Canada> <United States> ==Biography == Leon Po...") |
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'''Leon Prochnik''' (M / Poland, | '''Leon Prochnik''' (M / Poland, 1933), Holocaust survivor | ||
* KEYWORDS: <Poland> <Refugees> <Lithuania><Soviet Union> <Japan> <Canada> <United States> | * KEYWORDS: <Poland> <Refugees> <Lithuania><Soviet Union> <Japan> <Canada> <United States> | ||
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==Biography == | ==Biography == | ||
Leon Pochnik was born in 1933 into a Jewish family that owned the second largest chocolate factory in Poland. Until the age of 6, he enjoyed a privileged existence. In 1939, the family fled Nazi occupied Poland. For a year and a half, they traveled through Lithuania, | Leon Pochnik was born in 1933 into a Jewish family that owned in Krakow the second largest chocolate factory in Poland. Until the age of 6, he enjoyed a privileged existence. In 1939, the family fled Nazi occupied Poland. They stayed in Lithuania until they could secure a transit visa to Japan. For a year and a half, they traveled through Lithuania, Russia’s vast countryside by train, Japan and Canada before finally reaching the United States. | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
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[[Category:Holocaust Children, Poland (subject)|1933 Pochnik]] | [[Category:Holocaust Children, Poland (subject)|1933 Pochnik]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Holocaust Refugee Children (subject)|1933 Pochnik]] | ||
[[Category:Holocaust Refugee Children, Japan (subject)|1933 Pochnik]] |
Latest revision as of 18:26, 13 October 2020
Leon Prochnik (M / Poland, 1933), Holocaust survivor
- KEYWORDS: <Poland> <Refugees> <Lithuania><Soviet Union> <Japan> <Canada> <United States>
Biography
Leon Pochnik was born in 1933 into a Jewish family that owned in Krakow the second largest chocolate factory in Poland. Until the age of 6, he enjoyed a privileged existence. In 1939, the family fled Nazi occupied Poland. They stayed in Lithuania until they could secure a transit visa to Japan. For a year and a half, they traveled through Lithuania, Russia’s vast countryside by train, Japan and Canada before finally reaching the United States.