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Admin25.07.2021

Oral history interview with Mariya Kravtsova

While a lieutenant, she was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 23 February 1945 for her first 840 missions by decree of the Supreme Soviet; the gold star medal was presented to her in Poland on 8 March 1945 by Marshal.
Admin28.06.2021

Natalya Meklin

Oral History Nina Anushchenko, born in 1928 in Ukraine, describes the forced relocation of Jews from Odessa to Domanivka in 1942; the exhaustion of the Jews as a result of the march without food or water; the guarding of the Jews by Romanian and German soldiers; the imprisonment of the Jews at an empty club and old synagogue until they could be taken to Bogdanovka; local townspeople attempting to give food to the Jews, only to be turned away by the guards; the deaths of many Jews as a result of cold and starvation; seeing a wagon filled with bodies which would be transferred to a ditch in the forest; seeing Jews being transported to a sheep-fold where they were later shot; and the burning of the bodies.
Admin26.08.2021

Oral history interview with Mariya Kravtsova

Provenance This is a witness interview of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Perpetrators, Collaborators, and Witnesses: The Jeff and Toby Herr Testimony Initiative, a multi-year project to record the testimonies of non-Jewish witnesses to the Holocaust.
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Admin19.08.2021

Mariya Kravtsova

Oral History Valentin Savchuk, born in 1930 in Ukraine, describes a mass shooting of Jews at the shooting grounds of a local cavalry regiment; the actions of the Jews leading up to and during the shooting; hearing commands shouted in German; seeing some of the victims attempt to run from the shooting site; visiting the site a month later and seeing a pile of rotten clothes; seeing the bodies of members of the underground movement hanging in the middle of the city; hearing gunshots from other mass shootings and seeing people attempt to escape; hearing rumors that German soldiers were going to kill a group of communists; and German soldiers burning the house of his family as a result of their contacts with partisans.
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Admin18.07.2021

Natalya Meklin

Pretty girl was born on February 22, 1985 in Moscow.
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Admin02.07.2021

Kravtsova Mariya, Marika

Although the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has reopened to exhibition visitors, numerous other facilities, such as the Library and Archives Reading Room, remain closed until further notice.
Admin30.06.2021

Oral history interview with Mariya Kravtsova

You know, in the same year Mariya created her own brand Masha Kravtsova.
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Admin16.08.2021

Natalya Meklin

Oral History Inna Gavriltchenko, born in 1925 in Kharkov Kharkiv , Ukraine, describes the German occupation of Kharkov from 1941 to 1943; announcements ordering Jews to move to the ghetto; the procession of Jews, including her neighbors, to the ghetto; the fate of a Jewish family who was unable to move to the ghetto because the grandmother was paralyzed; the compulsory registration of Jews and communists; a horse market that was the location of hangings; the threat of being shot for Jews who appeared on the street; restrictions on the Jewish population; the looting of Jewish homes by local townspeople; and meeting a Jewish woman and child who were attempting to hide in plain sight by saying that they had a Ukrainian last name.
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Admin13.06.2021

Natalya Meklin

Research family history relating to the Holocaust and explore the Museum's collections about individual survivors and victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution.
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