![]() ![]() There, my grandmother worked as a hospital nurse for four years. He told me the story of how the women and children in our family were evacuated from Kharkiv to Uzbekistan and the Ural Mountains in 1941. With my father’s help, we were able to fill out the questionnaire. ![]() It contained a section called “evacuation.” Who from my family was evacuated during World War II? Where were they evacuated? How did they manage to survive in such a difficult financial situation? What were their strongest memories of the war? In the process of collecting information about my ancestors, I was given a questionnaire to fill out. As part of the project, my family’s historical narrative was reconstructed. ![]() Six years ago, I took part in the “Book of Generations” project in Israel. We cherish and honor the memory of our origin and know all of our relatives up to five generations back.įor us, family comes first. Every year, we celebrate Passover and Rosh Hashanah. My father is Jewish, and this means that my childhood was full of foods such as forshmak (Jewish herring) and matzah. I f you’re born in Ukraine, but you have Jewish roots, most likely your family will have an interweaving of Ukrainian and Jewish traditions. (Iana Syrotnikova) JN Contributing Writer Ashley Zlatopolsky translates a dispatch from a relative in Dnipro. Apartment building and car after March 1 bombing.
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