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Hershel Greenblat describes his family's experience boarding with the Goldwasser family in Atlanta, Georgia, in the early 1950s.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his first weeks in Atlanta, Georgia, where his family would settle in the United States.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his family's interaction with an American soldier while they were en route from New York to Georgia.
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Hershel Greenblat explains why a Jewish relief organization transferred his family to Georgia instead of Indiana.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his feelings about the United States when he first arrived as an immigrant from Europe in 1950.
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Hershel Greenblat remembers his arrival as a young immigrant in New York Harbor.
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Hershel Greenblat describes the destruction of cities and towns across Europe
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Hershel Greenblat describes his parents involvement in resistance movements in Ukraine.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his mother's nine-week absence while she was seeking treatment for a serious injury.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his family's experience hiding in Ukraine's network of underground caves.
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Hershel Greenblat describes conditions in the Beth Bialik displaced persons camp outside Salzburg, Austria.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his family's one-room home in a displaced persons camp.
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Hershel Greenblate describes how his parents met after joining resistance groups.
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Hershel Greenblat describes his arrival in New York Harbor.
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Hershel Greenblat describes a sense of community that developed in displaced persons camps.
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