Names of men, women and children identified in the photographic display in the
Holocaust History Museum at Yad Vashem
Jonas and Antonina B. Paulavicius and their children, Righteous Among the Nations.
Lithuania, 1936
Righteous Raoul Wallenberg with his Jewish assistants in his office. Budapest, Hungary,
November 1, 1944
Ceremony in which the title of Righteous Among The Nations was awarded by Yad Vashem to Yiorgos & Madeleine Mitzeliotis, Stefanos & Magdalini Korfiatis, and Archibishop Irinaios. Athens, Greece, June 1982
Group of Jewish youth movement members hidden by Righteous Among the Nations Joop & Willi Westerweel and other underground members. Loosdrecht, Holland,
summer 1942
Members of the Hanoar Hatzioni youth movement in Hungary before the Nazi occupation.
Balaton Boglar, Hungary, December 12, 1943
Portraits of Jewish children who were saved by the residents of the village Le Chambon-sur-Lignon during the Nazi occupation. France, 1942/1943
Wedding ceremony of Bernard Zilbermann & Fortunée Behar, held during the Nazi occupation. France, 1942
Identification photograph of Leah-Lonka Kozibrodska who was imprisoned in Auswitz-Birkenau under an assumed Polish identity. Poland, 1942
Waffen SS soldiers leading Jews captured during the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising to the Umschlagplatz. Poland,
April-May 1943
The Kovno ghetto Jewish police force during roll-call. Later on, the Nazis murdered 36 of them, following an investigation. Lithuania, March 26, 1944
Jewish children on the streets of the Kovno ghetto.
Lithuania, 1941-1943
Jews on the corner of Dvaro Street in the Kovno ghetto.
Lithuania, 1941-1943
Jewish Brigade soldier Joseph Wald, holding an artillery shell bearing the inscription “Gift for Hitler”. Italy, 1944/1945
Sisters Ita Hoffman–Deutsch and Friedel Deutsch shortly after liberation. Bergen-Belsen camp, Germany, April 1945
Wedding ceremony of survivors Dola Frenkiel and Mordechai Brown after the war. Cesarea DP camp, Italy, 1946
Wedding ceremony of survivors Chana (Anna) Keller and Zvi Kotlicki after the war. Passau DP camp, Germany, March 9, 1946