Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Overview
  • From the Yad Vashem Collections
  • Related Resources
  • About Us
  • The Holocaust
  • Digital Collections
  • Archives
  • Research
  • Education
  • Museum
  • Exhibitions
  • Remembrance
  • Righteous
  • Visiting
  • Friends
  • Press Room
  • Contact Us
Yad Vashem

  • Exhibition

  • Yad Vashem
  • Yad Vashem
  • Home
  • Overview
  • From the Yad Vashem Collections
  • Related Resources
    • The Holocaust
    • Digital Collections
    • Archives
    • Research
    • Education & E-learning
    • Museums
    • Exhibitions
    • Remembrance
    • Righteous
    • Visiting

"Stay Together" - The Fate of Jewish Families in 1944

Overview

Nikolsburg, Czechoslovakia, circa. 1925. Charlotte and Adolf Hellmann with their three children, Max, Lilly (with ribbon) and Edith.

Nikolsburg, Czechoslovakia, circa. 1925. Charlotte and Adolf Hellmann with their three children, Max, Lilly (with ribbon) and Edith.

From the Yad Vashem Collections

The Batis Family (Ioannina, Greece)

The Batis Family (Ioannina, Greece)

The Hellmann Family (Nikolsburg, Czechoslovakia)

The Hellmann Family (Nikolsburg, Czechoslovakia)

The Chanoch Family (Kovno, Lithuania)

The Chanoch Family (Kovno, Lithuania)

The Drimer Family (Bârsana, Romania)

The Drimer Family (Bârsana, Romania)

The Fischer Family (Bratislava, Czechoslovakia)

The Fischer Family (Bratislava, Czechoslovakia)

The Haber Family (Bălţi, Romania)

The Haber Family (Bălţi, Romania)

The Urbach Family (Montech, France)

The Urbach Family (Montech, France)

The Herzberg Family (Berlin, Germany)

The Herzberg Family (Berlin, Germany)

The Horwitz Family (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

The Horwitz Family (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

The Jónás Family (Sacaseni, Romania)

The Jónás Family (Sacaseni, Romania)

The Rein Family (Lodz, Poland)

The Rein Family (Lodz, Poland)

The Klein Family (Batyu, Czechoslovakia)

The Klein Family (Batyu, Czechoslovakia)

The Steiner Family (Bratislava, Czechoslovakia)

The Steiner Family (Bratislava, Czechoslovakia)

The Bleicher Family (Vilna, Lithuania)

The Bleicher Family (Vilna, Lithuania)

The Zalkind Family (Vilna, Lithuania)

The Zalkind Family (Vilna, Lithuania)

Related Online Exhibitions

Weddings during the Holocaust

Weddings during the Holocaust

"Love Her Like a Mother" - Last Letters from the Holocaust: 1944

"Love Her Like a Mother" - Last Letters from the Holocaust: 1944

The Story of Three Jewish Families in Paris During the Holocaust

The Story of Three Jewish Families in Paris During the Holocaust

"Suddenly the Skies Darkened". 1939: Jewish Families on the Brink of War

"Suddenly the Skies Darkened". 1939: Jewish Families on the Brink of War

In 1944, the demise of Nazi Germany was already on the horizon. The German army, suffering defeat after defeat, was slowly pushed back towards Germany.  And yet, despite the military losses, the Nazi extermination machine continued to operate at full throttle.  1944 was the year in which the last remaining Jews in Greece, Italy, France, Holland, Slovakia and Germany were sent to their deaths; the year in which the Jews of Hungary were deported to Auschwitz, and the last remaining ghettos of Lodz and Kovno were liquidated.  In the selfsame year, Minsk and Vilna in the east had already been liberated, as had Paris and Rome in the west.

Confronted with a brutal reality of ongoing persecution, Jewish families tried desperately to save their members from a seemingly inescapable fate.

'Stay together' my mother said… We wanted to stay together, like everyone else. Family unity is one of our important traditions, as the enemy well knew. And he now used that knowledge, spreading the rumor in the ghetto that the Jewish population would be transferred to Hungarian labor camp where – and this was the essential thing – families would remain together. And we believed it. So it was that the strength of our family tie, which had contributed to the survival of our people for centuries, became a tool in the exterminator's hands."

Elie Wiesel, All Rivers Run to the Sea

In this exhibition, we follow the stories of a range of Jewish families and their destinies in the pivotal year of 1944.

SUPPORTED BY

Copyright © 2025 Yad Vashem. The World Holocaust Remembrance Center
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Blog
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram