Some months ago, whilst rummaging through boxes unopened for many decades, I came across photographs of people from the early 20th century whom I could not identify. There were annotations in several of these photographs in either Hebrew, Yiddish, Russian, German, Lithuanian or Latvian. This piqued my curiosity, and after several months of investigation, I managed to piece together the puzzle. It transpired that these were photographs of my late father’s family who had been murdered in the Holocaust.

Like many of my generation, brought up in the safe confines of South Africa during and after the Second World War, I always assumed that my whole family was as fortunate as my father and his siblings, and had escaped the Holocaust. My cousins and I were very close and neither our parents, grandparents nor any other relative ever discussed the fate of these unfortunate family members.

My father’s sister, Chaya Rabinowitz, made aliyah in 1935 from Kovno. She gave testimony on her murdered relatives to Yad Vashem in 1956, but never discussed the family’s tragic ending with her daughters. However, the latter inherited a trove of old photographs, which prove invaluable to me in my research on the fate of the family. Unfortunately, Chaya did not annotate the pictures with precise names. She only identified the individuals as “my relatives murdered by the Nazis.”

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