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Girls on Paper:
Pictured here
are the two daughters of Hananya Scheinfeld. Written on the
back is the following description: “Girls on Paper.” Until
recently, Yad Vashem had no more information about the girls-
not even their names. The picture was given to Yad Vashem by
Hananya’s nephew Joseph Scheinfeld. Hananya Scheinfeld had
passed away, and Joseph did not know the names of the two girls.
Within the last few years, Yad Vashem has
digitized over 2 million Pages of Testimony and has developed a
sophisticated retrieval system.
Pages
of Testimony contain basic
biographic details of a Holocaust victim and are submitted by
family members or friends. As a result of the sophisticated
computerized database and retrieval system, it became possible
to conduct a search by the name of the submitter of Pages of
Testimony. Previously, a search was possible only by name of the
victim. Since the names of the girls or their mother was not
known, it was not possible until recently to determine if
Hananya Scheinfeld had in fact ever submitted a Page of
Testimony with the names of his family. Recently, after a brief
digital search was conducted, it was discovered that Hananya
Scheinfeld had indeed submitted a Page of Testimony in 1956 in
memory of his wife and had listed the names of his daughters-Rozel
age 7 and Kayla Sarah age 6. Both Frida Scheinfeld and her
daughters perished in Auschwitz in May 1944. Through the Page of
Testimony and modern technology - the family names were redeemed
from oblivion.
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Page of Testimony submitted by Hananya Scheinfeld for his
family. |
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Copyright ©2004 Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority |
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