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Alice Goldberger and the Children of Weir Courtney
After the Holocaust, the British government provided aid to more than 700 child survivors, several of whom came under the nurturing care of Alice Goldberger at Weir Courtney, a donated English estate. Archivist Rebecca Erbelding shares writings and drawings the children made for Alice, depicting happy scenes from their postwar lives.
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One Survivor, Two Identities: The Kurt Lewin Collection
Kurt Lewin, son of the chief rabbi of Lvov, survived the Holocaust by hiding as a young monk. As archivist Rebecca Erbelding explains, the collection of documents Lewin donated to the Museum is rare in its ability to show the changing identities of a person before, during, and after being in hiding.
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A Cherished Object: Kristine Keren’s Green Sweater
Curator Susan Snyder shares the story behind the donation of a young girl’s green sweater—a gift the girl received from her grandmother and wore while hiding from the Nazis in the sewers of Lvov, Poland, for 14 months.
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From Image to Rescue: The Gavra Mandil Collection
Curator Teresa Pollin recounts the story of how a single, unusual photograph spared Moshe Mandil’s family from arrest by Germans and how a young Albanian Muslim man ultimately saved their lives.
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A Surprising Discovery: “Kiki” the Monkey Puppet
Curator Kyra Schuster recounts the serendipitous story of how the Museum came to acquire the puppet that US Army medic Eldon Nicholas used to entertain children at the Vittel internment camp in France.
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Curators Corner
Extraordinary Stories Behind the Objects in Our Collections