Holocaust Survivors

Fellowship Blog
Faces of The Fellowship: Lev
“I wouldn’t call my life a life, but, rather, survival,” says Holocaust survivor, Lev, who continues to face hunger today. Learn how we helped!

Fellowship Blog
Project Spotlight: Food Assistance to Holocaust Survivors in the FSU
In 2020, we helped provide food, clothing, and warmth to over 100,000 elderly and Holocaust survivors in the former Soviet Union!

Fellowship Blog
Faces of The Fellowship: Holocaust Survivor Katerina Is Blessed by You
“I know why God has kept me alive – so that I could be saved by Americans once more!” says 96-year-old Holocaust survivor, Katerina.

Fellowship Blog
Holocaust Survivor Receives Honorary High School Diploma
At just seven years old, Miriam Schreiber, now 88, witnessed the Nazis invading Poland. Years later, after the war, she wanted to complete her education, but never had the opportunity – until now.

Fellowship Blog
Holocaust Survivor Reunites With Family of U.S. Soldier
This Holocaust survivor had a Zoom call with the family of the American soldier who encouraged her with a message of hope after being liberated during WWII.

Fellowship Blog
A Story of Hope from Holocaust Survivors in This Moment of Fear
Writing at The Christian Post, Yael Eckstein tells a family story of God intervening when His people suffer.

Stand For Israel
‘They Said Goodbye to Him’
A nurse from Fellowship-supported Shaare Zedek Medical Center tells the touching story of the last minutes of Israel's first coronavirus fatality, an elderly Holocaust survivor.

Fellowship Blog
Faces of The Fellowship: Nina
For Nina, the monthly grocery card she receives from The Fellowship feels like “air to breathe.”

Fellowship Blog
9 Standouts from New Yorkers’ Holocaust-Era Artifacts
In an effort to preserve Holocaust artifacts for future generations, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum asked New Yorkers for any photos, letters, or documents from this era.

Fellowship Blog
First Transport of Jews to Auschwitz Was 997 Young Slovak Women
A new book explains how young women were deceived during the Holocaust, so that they would show up for the first transport of Jews to Auschwitz.

Fellowship Blog
A Holocaust Survivor’s Daughter on How She Honors Her Family
Writing at TIME magazine, Helen Epstein says why “stumbling stones” – which are meant to commemorate lives lost in the Holocaust – continue to “surprise, provoke, and trigger reflection.” And why she chose for her own loved ones who perished in the Holocaust to be honored in this way.

Fellowship Blog
Yad Vashem, Facebook Partner To Commemorate Holocaust Victims
Yad Vashem and Facebook partner to create an IRemember Wall to commemorate Holocaust victims.
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