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Biographical essay about Judd Nissanov, 2014

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Document
Download Virtual Book Judd Nissanov.docx (application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document; 123.08 KB)

Information

Date

2014

Description

Judd Nissanov's journey escaping the Nazis as part of the Polish army took him to Persia, Jordan, Palestine and Egypt.

Digital ID

jhp000534
Details

Citation

jhp000534. Generations of the Shoah - Nevada Records, approximately 2001-2020. MS-00720. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d19k48j2g

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Standardized Rights Statement

Digital Provenance

Original archival records created digitally

Extent

126039 bytes

Language

English

Format

application/pdf

Judd Nissanov Virtual Book Yudah (Judd) Nissanov was born in Poland in 1924, the youngest of 5 children. He saw very quickly what the Nazis were capable of when they shot hundreds of Jews in the first two weeks they occupied his area of Poland in 1939. The Soviet Union took over his region and stayed until 1941. Prior to the Nazi attack on the Soviet Union, Yehuda saw German tanks massing at the border. When the Nazis came back he left and started walking east. While walking he flagged down a Soviet truck. The driver did not yet know about the German invasion but he took Yudah back to his unit. The Russians adopted him and Yudah went with them. He later changed his name, said he was a Catholic and joined the Polish army to fight the Nazis. He was sent through Persia (Iran) en route to Africa. He was part of the honor guard that stood at the gate for the Shah?s 22nd birthday. After Persia he went to Jordan and Palestine en route to Egypt. When he crossed into Palestine and saw signs in Hebrew, he decided to desert. Again, he just left. He hopped on a bus and went where it took him: to kibbutz Negba. He stayed there to avoid British MPs who were looking for Polish deserters in the cities. By 1943 he knew, from another Polish refugee, what was happening to the Jews in Poland under the Nazis.