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Reply The Girl in the Diary: Searching for Rywka from the Łódź Ghetto will be on display from July 29 through Dec. 30 at the Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus in Farmington Hills, Mich. (Image courtesy of the Galicia Museum, Krakow Poland)
In 1945, a Soviet doctor found a school notebook in the liberated Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp. It was a diary written by Rywka Lipszyc, a teenager in the Łódź Ghetto, between October 1943 and April 1944. The contents were the testament of a Jewish girl who lost her siblings and parents, but never lost hope despite moments of doubt.
More than 60 years after its discovery, the diary traveled to the United States, where it was translated from Polish, supplemented with commentaries and published in book form.
Thursday, July 22, 2021 by: News Editors
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https://www.afinalwarning.com/537655.html (Natural News) “The Nazis wanted Germans to support the Nazi dictatorship and believe in Nazi ideas. To accomplish this goal, they tried to control forms of communication through censorship and propaganda. This included control of newspapers, magazines, books, art, theater, music, movies, and radio” said the United States HolocaustMemorial Museum. “When the Nazis came to power in 1933, the German constitution guaranteed freedom of speech and freedom of the press. Through decrees and laws, the Nazis abolished these civil rights and destroyed German democracy. Starting in 1934, it was illegal to criticize the Nazi government. Even telling a joke about Hitler was considered treachery. People in Nazi Germany could not say or write whatever they wanted.”