Difference between revisions of "Jan Kulbinger"

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'''Janek Kulbinger''' (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor.
'''Janek Kulbinger''' (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor.


* KEYWORDS : <[[Prison]]>
* KEYWORDS : <[[Drohobycz Ghetto]]> <[[Hidden Children]]>


* MEMOIRS : ''The Children Accuse'' (1946), 221-226.
* MEMOIRS : ''The Children Accuse'' (1946), 221-226.
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== Biography ==
== Biography ==


Janek "Jan" Kulbinger was born May 13, 1930 in Drohobycz, Poland; son of Tadeusz Kulbinger and Jetka Silberman (Jetti Liebermann).
* [[Holocaust Survivor Testimonies, Poland]] #344 (29 Jun 1945)
 
Janek "Jan" Kulbinger was born May 13, 1930 in Drohobycz, Poland; the son of Tadeusz Kulbinger and Jetka Silberman (Jetti Liebermann).
 
"The invasion of the Germans into Drohobycz. Pogroms organized by the Ukrainians. Organizing the ghetto in Drohobycz. Further liquidation actions. During one of them, the author lost his mother and siblings. Escape from the transport going to the death camp in Bełżec. Stay in Lviv on the so-called Aryan papers. In 1944, he was admitted as a Pole to the orphanage of R.G.O."


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:Holocaust Children's Earliest Narratives (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]
[[Category:Holocaust Children's Earliest Narratives (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]
[[Category:Holocaust Survivor Testimonies, Poland (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]
[[Category:Drohobycz Ghetto (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]
[[Category:Hidden Children (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]
[[Category:Hidden Children, Poland (subject)|1930 Kulbinger]]

Revision as of 11:50, 27 June 2021

Janek Kulbinger (M / Poland, 1930), Holocaust survivor.

  • MEMOIRS : The Children Accuse (1946), 221-226.

Biography

Janek "Jan" Kulbinger was born May 13, 1930 in Drohobycz, Poland; the son of Tadeusz Kulbinger and Jetka Silberman (Jetti Liebermann).

"The invasion of the Germans into Drohobycz. Pogroms organized by the Ukrainians. Organizing the ghetto in Drohobycz. Further liquidation actions. During one of them, the author lost his mother and siblings. Escape from the transport going to the death camp in Bełżec. Stay in Lviv on the so-called Aryan papers. In 1944, he was admitted as a Pole to the orphanage of R.G.O."

External links