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  2. Every Person Has a Name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Every_Person_Has_a_Name

    The Names Book is a large commemorative book listing the names and brief details about some 4,800,000 Jewish victims of the Holocaust known to Yad Vashem and documented through the Names Recovery Project, out of the total 6 million victims. The book has been published in two editions, in 2004 and a decade later.

  3. Jewish women in the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_women_in_the_Holocaust

    Then when [the pregnant Jewish women] collapsed, they were thrown into the crematory – alive." [7]: 86 : 376 Rape, unwanted pregnancies, forced abortions, medical experimentation and/or examination, and sterilization were also common and contributed to the sexual violations and abuse many Jewish women faced during the Holocaust. [12]

  4. Settela Steinbach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Settela_Steinbach

    Anna Maria (Settela) Steinbach (23 December 1934, Buchten – 31 July 1944) was a Dutch girl who was gassed in Nazi Germany's Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp. Initially identified as a Dutch Jew, her personal identity and association with the Sinti group of the Romani people were discovered in 1994.

  5. Franceska Mann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franceska_Mann

    Franceska Manheimer-Rosenberg (4 February 1917 – 23 October 1943), better known as Franceska Mann, was a Polish Jewish ballerina who, according to some accounts, killed a Nazi guard, Josef Schillinger , while a prisoner at the Auschwitz concentration camp and wounded at least one other, Wilhelm Emmerich . Her actions are said to have sparked ...

  6. Names of the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_the_Holocaust

    The Encyclopædia Britannica defines "Holocaust" as "the systematic state-sponsored killing of six million Jewish men, women and children, and millions of others by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II", [26] although the article goes on to say, "The Nazis also singled out the Roma (Gypsies). They were the only other group ...

  7. Captured Hehalutz fighters photograph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captured_Hehalutz_fighters...

    The photograph is known as a famous representation [16] of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising and of Jewish resistance during the Holocaust. The photograph was used for the first day of issue cover for a Polish stamp commemorating the seventieth anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.

  8. Ala Gertner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ala_Gertner

    On 28 October 1940 Gertner was ordered to report to the train station in nearby Sosnowiec, where she was taken to a Nazi labor camp in Geppersdorf (now Rzedziwojowice), a construction site where hundreds of Jewish men were used as forced laborers on the Reichsautobahn section (now Berlinka) and where women worked in the kitchen and laundry.

  9. Hannah Pick-Goslar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannah_Pick-Goslar

    The girls attended the 6th Montessori School (renamed after Anne Frank in 1957) in Amsterdam and then the Jewish Lyceum. During The Holocaust, they saw each other again whilst imprisoned at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Goslar and her young sister were the only family members who survived the war, being rescued from the Lost Train.