
Kapustinsky family
The Kapustinsky family, who hid Yevel Sorsher from July 1942 to December 1942, and were recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem. Pictured

The Kapustinsky family, who hid Yevel Sorsher from July 1942 to December 1942, and were recognized as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem. Pictured

Photograph of Matus Stolov, his wife Victoria, and their daughter, Irina, in Minsk, Belarus, 1980.

Diploma for Matus Stolov’s from the ‘Byelorussian Polytechnic Institute’, indicating that he was granted a qualification as ‘Engineer of Thermal Energy’. It was issued by

Photograph of a group of Russian partisan resistance fighters from the Lenin Brigade. The image was taken, using a camera found during an ambush of

Photograph of a house on Shornaya Street in the Minsk ghetto, Belarus. The large window on the house’s 1st floor was Matus Stolov’s small room.

Photograph of Matus Stolov’s family taken in Minsk, Belarus, 1940. From left to right; Fanya (Korngold) Stolov (mother), Matus Stolov, and Boris Stolov (older brother).

Photograph of Lena Pechenezhskaya (‘Big Lena’). She was declared a Righteous Person posthumously in 2001 by Yad Vashem. The photo was taken in Minsk, Belarus,

Photograph titled “My mother Sarah (1900) and my father Lazav (1897)”, picturing the parents of Mikhail Mirkin. Chereya, Belarus.


Handwritten letter in Russian. Written in black ink by Mikhail Mirkin on June 29, 1944, addressed to his parents in Chereya, Belarus. Mikhail, a Soviet

Photograph of Pasha Aliakseyeva with two friends at a military hospital where she worked in Minsk, 2000.

Photograph of Raisa Ryklina (2nd row, right) with friends pre-war, March 1941.