Luba Blum-Bielicka a adăugat o fotografie
acum 45 minute
Luba
Luba Bielicka Blum (1906, Wilno, Vilna Governorate - 1973, Warsaw) was a Polish socialist activist of the Bund, and a nurse in the Warsaw Ghetto.
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Luba Bielicka Blum (1906, Wilno, Vilna Governorate - 1973, Warsaw) was a Polish socialist activist of the Bund, and a nurse in the Warsaw Ghetto.
Luba Blum-Bielicka a adăugat o fotografie
acum 45 minute
Luba Bielicka Blum (1906, Wilno, Vilna Governorate - 1973, Warsaw) was a Polish socialist activist of the Bund, and a nurse in the Warsaw Ghetto.
Luba Blum-Bielicka a adăugat o fotografie
acum 46 minute
Early life She was born in Wilno, then a part of the Russian Empire, into a Jewish Orthodox family of ten children and received her secondary education there. While in a gymnasium she met her future husband Abrasza Blum and along with him, joined the Bund's youth movement, the Tsukunft. She attended the nursing school in Warsaw, became its assistant director and was responsible for the training of new nurses. During this time she married Abrasza and they had two children.
Luba Blum-Bielicka a lăsat un gând
acum 47 minute
World War II With the German invasion of Poland and the subsequent departure of some of the staff, Luba became the director of the school. Soon after the school was closed by the Germans and Luba and her family were forced to move into the Warsaw Ghetto. Luba managed to have the nursing school reopened inside the ghetto, as the Nursing School of the Jewish Hospital, and continued the training of nurses under new, harsh, conditions. This was the only educational establishment allowed by the Germans in the Ghetto, with about 60 students in training. When the German authorities commenced with the liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto, the students from Luba's school were taken to the Umschlagplatz and from there to the Treblinka extermination camp. Luba's and Abrasza's children, Wiktoria and Alexander, were taken to the deportation point as well, but, with help from Polish nurses, she managed to have them smuggled out before the actual deportation to the camp took place. However, soon after, in the January Aktion the Nazis took over her hospital, and executed all the patients, including newborn infants, and most of the staff. Luba and her children survived by hiding in the cellar of the…
Luba Blum-Bielicka a lăsat un gând
acum 48 minute
Post war and recognition After the war Luba was the director of the children's home in Otwock and later worked in a new nursing school in Warsaw. She received the Florence Nightingale Medal in 1966 for her work as a nurse in a children's hospital in the Warsaw Ghetto during the German occupation of Poland. She also worked in a hospital in New York. She died in 1973 in Warsaw and was buried in the main alley of the Okopowa Street Jewish Cemetery.
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