Lonia goldman fishman biography of martin

          Lonia Goldman Fishman was born in in Poland to a strictly orthodox Jewish family.!

          Identifier
          irn509103
          Language of Description
          English
          Alt. Identifiers
          • 1992.A.0125.25
          • RG-50.233.0025
          Level of Description
          Item
          Languages
          Source
          EHRI Partner

          Sharon Tash, of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum ID Card Project, conducted the interview with Lonia Fishman in Malden, MA on March 29, 1992.

          United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

          Funding Note: The cataloging of this oral history interview has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.

          No restrictions on access

          • Fishman, Sevek, 1918-
          • Sharon Tash
          • Lonia Fishman
          • Fishman, Lonia, 1920-
          • Jewish police officers--Poland--Warsaw.

            Lonia Goldman (Fishman) was born in Vengrov in She, her three sisters and her brother were the children of an orthodox family that owned a cotton.

          • Lonia Goldman (Fishman) was born in Vengrov in She, her three sisters and her brother were the children of an orthodox family that owned a cotton.
          • Oral history interview with Lonia Fishman.
          • Lonia Goldman Fishman was born in in Poland to a strictly orthodox Jewish family.
          • Lonia Fishman (née Goldman, born on May 3, in Wegrow, Poland) and her husband, Sevek Fishman, discuss Lonia's childhood and her family Your search.
          • Fishman, Lonia and.
          • Jews--Persecutions--Poland.
          • Suicidal behavior.
          • Jewish ghettos--Poland--Warsaw.
          • Hiding places--Poland--Warsaw.

            Deportation changed “everything in his life.” On August 27, , he lost his mother Leah (Lonia), who was a teacher.

          • Warsaw (Poland)
          • Jewish women in the Holocaust.
          • Women--Personal narratives.
          • World War, 1939-1945--Jews--Poland--Warsaw.
          • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Personal narratives