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Galina Gebruk

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Galina with son Andrei

Galina Mikhailovna Gebruk (Russian: Галина Михайловна Гебрук; 21 May 1933[1] – 24 May 2022[2]) was a prisoner of the Kaluga Ghetto [fr],[3][4][5] a survivor and witness of the Holocaust,[6][7][8] an activist of the Jewish movement in Russia[9][10] and Veteran of Labour.[11]

Born in 1933 to Russian father Mikhail Kryuchkov and Jewish mother Disya Zalmanovna.[12]

Memories remain very vague. I remember hunger, cold and the screams of the Germans. And yet a fire: the Germans set fire to the fence of the ghetto during the retreat. Mom threw me over the fence into the snow, and then by some miracle she climbed over the burning boards herself. I was very afraid that I would lose my mother, I screamed loudly and cried. Mom and I returned home.

[13]

Her husband was artist Ivan Gebruk (born 1932), an Estonian Jew. They met in Siberia. Their children are Andrei and Ekaterina.[11]

Star of the Kaluga Ghetto's prisoners

References

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  1. ^ Galina Gebruk. Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  2. ^ Ушла из жизни одна из последних выживших узница Калужского еврейского гетто в годы войны Галина Михайловна Гебрук
  3. ^ 75 лет назад Красная Армия освободила узников еврейского гетто в Калуге, REGNUM News Agency. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  4. ^ 75 лет назад Красная Армия освободила узников еврейского гетто в Калуге, stmegi.com. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  5. ^ 75 лет назад было освобождено первое еврейское гетто в Европе, lechaim.ru. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  6. ^ Нацистский геноцид в документах, his.1sept.ru. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  7. ^ Что такое Холокост, Новая газета, 3 February 2010.
  8. ^ Crispin Brooks. Russian Survivor Testimonies from the Shoah Foundation Archive, USC Shoah Foundation. Published 2009 (p. 11).
  9. ^ В областном центре прошла конференция, посвященная 75-ой годовщине освобождения узников калужского еврейского гетто
  10. ^ В Калужской синагоге прошла конференция, посвященная 75-летней годовщине освобождению Калуги и калужского еврейского гетто от немецко-фашистских захватчиков, pre.admoblkaluga.ru. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  11. ^ a b Мы не можем молчать, Russian Research and Educational Holocaust Center (April 2020).
  12. ^ История Еврейского гетто в Калуге, school-science.ru. Accessed 20 October 2022.
  13. ^ Увидела свет книга о калужском еврейском гетто, vest-news.ru. Accessed 20 October 2022.

Literature

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  • Maya Dobychina. The Jewish Ghetto in Kaluga, November-December 1941 ISBN 9785905456152 (2012)[1]
  • Maria Gilyova / Tatyana Pasman. We Cannot be Silent. Schoolchildren and Students about the Holocaust (2017)
  • Vadim Dubson. Ghetto in the Occupied Territory of the Russian Federation (1941-1942) // Bulletin of the Jewish University. — 2000. — No. 3 (21). — p. 157-184.
  • Ilya Altman. The Holocaust on the territory of the USSR: Encyclopedia (2009) — p. 378-379. ISBN 978-5-8243-1296-6
  • Sergei Mikheyenkov. Stop Guderian. 50th Army in the Battles for Tula and Kaluga. 1941-1942 (2013)
  • Boris Saltsman. Catastrophe: To Know and Remember. ISBN 978-5-457-35049-6
  • Leonid Yuzefovich, Zakhar Prilepin, Galina Yuzefovich, Marina Stepnova and others. How We Survived the War. Folk Stories ISBN 978-5-04-011776-5
  • Gai Miron. The Yad Vashem Encyclopedia of the Ghettos during the Holocoust (2009) — p. 1067 ISBN 978-965-308-345-5
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