|
Remma Radinskaya living in
Dnepropetrovsk
gave the photographs of her family to the National
museum
of
Holocaust history in
Ukraine Tkuma.
She said: “We are presenting you these photographs with all our heart to
perpetuate the memory”.
 
One picture shows Remma with father Isaac and mother Raisa, another –
Remma with grandfather Abram and the third – Remma herself. Photographs were
made in prewar period when Gershbert family – Isaac, Raisa and Remma – lived in
Mogilyev-Podol’sk city. During Nazi occupation they managed to evacuate in
Chelyabinsk the city
where their father brought securities of the organization where he worked. Then
Isaac left to battle-front. And where were the photographs? They were kept with
Remma grandparents: Shakhna and El’ka. El’ka clasped them to her bosom mincing
behind Shakhna who was drawn to execution. Nazi thrown them to deep ditch where
they gasped to death. And the photographs scattered in the air. A neighbor from their
village who knew this family and their children well found them covered with
snow. When Raisa with her daughter
returned back from evacuation and Isaak returned from battle-front, their
neighbor gave them saved relics. The events took place in Geisin, a town in
Vinnitsa region where Nazi
held the first action of mass destruction of Jewish population in 1941.
Alla Farimets,
coordinator of museum
programs of
Tkuma
Center
|