Holdings Information
Bibliographic Record Display
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Author/Creator:K., Girsh, 1914-
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Title:Girsh K. Holocaust testimony (HVT-3593) [videorecording] / interviewed by Irina Trampolski and Ina Gurary, July 31, 1995.
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Published/Created:Minsk, Belarus : Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, 1995.
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Physical Description:1 videorecording (3 hr., 30 min.) : col.
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Yale Holdings
Holdings Record Display
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Location:LSF-Physical copy for request by library staff only
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Call Number: MS 1322
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Status:Not Checked Out
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Digital testimony (mssa.hvt.3593)
For information on where you can view this digital testimony, click here.
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Location:LSF-Physical copy for request by library staff only
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Notes:Associated material: Kantor, Girsh. Interview 29519. Visual History Archive, USC Shoah Foundation. Access at https://vha.usc.edu.
This testimony is in Russian.
2 copies: Betacam SP master; and 1/2 in. VHS with time coding.
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Summary:Videotape testimony of Girsh K., who was born in Minsk, Russia in 1914, the fourth of seven children. He recounts his family moving to Moscow in 1916 to avoid the German invasion; returning to Minsk in 1918; hardships under German and Polish invasions; attending a Jewish school; Soviet elimination of Jewish cultural and religious institutions in the 1930s; training as an engineer in Moscow; working in a shoe factory in Minsk; his brothers serving in the military; German occupation; ghettoization with his parents and sisters; round-up of all Jewish men; a mass shooting of all professionals in a nearby village (he did not reveal he was an engineer); transfer to prison in Minsk; release back to the ghetto; incarceration in Shirokaya Street camp; sadistic public executions by Lithuanian guards; slave labor repairing machinery; transfer to Maly Trostinec; assistance from fellow prisoners; several assignments including repairing sewing machines; failed escape attempts with assistance from non-Jews; sabotaging the sewing machines; transfer back to Shirokaya Street; setting a fire with others in an escape effort; return to Maly Trostinec; torture after another failed escape; fellow prisoners assisting his recovery; escaping with a group in June 1944 as Soviet troops approached; assistance from local peasants; arrival of Soviet forces; volunteering to join them; arrest with another Jew because they had no identity papers; a forced march with thousands of other prisoners considered collaborators; assistance from a soldier escaping with his Jewish friend; hospitalization; returning to Minsk; employment in a shoe factory; marriage; the births of two children; their deaths in a 1968 accident; and his wife's death two years later. Mr. K. notes all his immediate family were killed in the war, except one brother. He shows photographs.
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Cite as:Girsh K. Holocaust Testimony (HVT-3593). Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, Yale University Library.
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Subjects:K., Girsh, 1914-
Maly Trostinec (Concentration camp)
Holocaust survivors.
Video tapes.
Men.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Personal narratives.
World War, 1939-1945--Personal narratives, Jewish.
World War, 1914-1918--Personal narratives, Jewish.
Jewish ghettos.
Jews--Belarus--Minsk.
World War, 1939-1945--Atrocities.
World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons, German.
Forced labor.
Sabotage.
Escapes.
World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons, Soviet.
Russia.
Minsk (Belarus)
Moscow (Russia)
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Subjects (Local Yale):Mass killings.
Antisemitism--Prewar.
Aid by non-Jews.
Mutual aid.
Partisans.
Postwar experiences.
Minsk ghetto.
Shirokaya Street (Minsk, Belarus : Concentration camp)
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Genre/Form:Oral histories (document genres)
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Also listed under:Gurary, Ina, interviewer.
Trampolski, Irina, interviewer.
Link to this page: https://hdl.handle.net/10079/bibid/4291901
