Difference between revisions of "Category:Holocaust Children Studies--1970s"

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====1970====
====1970====


[[File:1970 Ziemian.jpg|thumb|left|150px]]
[[File:1970 Ziemian 1st ed.jpg|thumb|left|150px]]


Joseph Ziemian, '''The Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square''' (Minneapolis : Lerner Publications Co., 1970).  
Joseph Ziemian, '''The Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square''' (Minneapolis : Lerner Publications Co., 1970).  

Revision as of 17:20, 19 February 2022

Auschwitz Children.jpg


The page: Holocaust Children Studies Studies--1970s includes (in chronological order) scholarly and literary works in the field of Holocaust Children Studies made in the 1970s, or from 1970 to 1979.


Highlights (1970s)
Highlights (1970s)



1970s.jpg

Holocaust Children Studies : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- Home

General : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- 1920s -- 1910s -- 1900s -- 1850s -- 1800s -- 1700s -- 1600s -- 1500s -- 1450s -- Medieval -- Home



1970

Joseph Ziemian, The Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square (Minneapolis : Lerner Publications Co., 1970).

"The Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square is the true account of a band of Jewish children, ages seven to sixteen, who survived the Warsaw Ghetto during the last three years of World War II (1943-1945). The author, Joseph Ziemien, finds two of the children by accident at a soup kitchen in Central Warsaw ... The astonishing, true story of a group of Jewish children who managed to escape from the Warsaw ghetto in 1942 and survive in the Aryan section of the Nazi-occupied city. Sentenced to death, hounded at every step, they kept themselves alive by peddling cigarettes in Warsaw's Three Crosses Square - where the author, a member of the Jewish Underground in Poland, met and helped them and recorded their story. Several of the children were finally caught and killed, but most survived and are alive today. The story of the cigarette sellers has been published in Polish, Romanian, Hebrew and Yiddish, and a dramatised version has been broadcast in Israel. The book was awarded a literary prize by the World Jewish Congress in New York."--Publisher description

1979

1979 Schwarberg.jpg

Günther Schwarberg. Der SS-Arzt und die Kinder: Bericht über den Mord vom Bullenhuser Damm <German> (Hamburg [Germany]: Gruner und Jahr, 1979).

English tr. by Henri Nannen. The Murders at Bullenhuser Damm: The SS Doctor and the Children (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984).

"On the night of April 20, 1945, 20 Jewish children who had been used in medical experiments at Neuengamme, their four adult caretakers and six Soviet prisoners were murdered in the basement of the school ... The twenty Jewish children (10 boys and 10 girls, age 5 to 12, from Poland, France, Italy and Slovenia) came from Auschwitz concentration camp. They were chosen by Josef Mengele and sent to Neuengamme as a "gift" to his colleague Kurt Heissmeyer, to be used as guinea pigs for experiments on tuberculosis"--Publisher description.

Günther Schwarberg (1926-2008) was a German journalist and author whose 1979 series of articles in German news magazine Der Stern and subsequent book "The SS Doctor and the Children" brought the World War II era war crimes committed in Neuengamme concentration camp and Bullenhuser Damm School in Hamburg to the public's conscience in Germany, and the rest of the world.

Media in category "Holocaust Children Studies--1970s"

The following 24 files are in this category, out of 24 total.