Темная сторона Сибирского леса.
“Well, we’re all wounded. We carry our wounds around with us through life, and eventually they kill us. Things happen that leave a mark in space, in time. In us.”
Six Feet Under (2001-2005)
Темная сторона Сибирского леса.
Столица Сибири раскинулась под моими ножками пару дней назад.
Светлый, большой, чистый и приветливый город.
Люди из разного социального класса идут по Красному проспекту, не обращая внимания друг на друга. В своем Томске я не привыкла к такому обилию магазинов и площадей. Но я честно опробовала столько пространства этого города, сколько смогла.
Город, в котором можно жить хотя бы по той причине, что путь с работы до дома может быть рпзнообразным хоть каждый день.
“Well, we’re all wounded. We carry our wounds around with us through life, and eventually they kill us. Things happen that leave a mark in space, in time. In us.”
Six Feet Under (2001-2005)
Black Children look into a ‘White Only’ Park in 1956
“Outside Looking In,” photographed by Gordon Parks for Life.
Woman in Iconic Holocaust Photo Identified by Researcher
It’s one of the iconic photos of the Holocaust.
The scene was captured on April 13, 1945, moments after inmates were liberated from a train transferring them from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany to the Theresienstadt camp in Czechoslovakia.
The woman in the photograph apparently is Shlima Spitzer, and the girl might be either of her two daughters. Spitzer’s husband had already been killed.
Shlima Spitzer, who was Falik’s aunt, and her two daughters settled in Brooklyn, where Spitzer remarried a prominent rabbi named Lichtenstein. The girls took his surname.
The kerchief Spitzer was wearing in the photo typified that worn by women in the Belz and Skver streams of Hasidism living in Kenderes, Hungary, the observant family’s hometown prior to the Holocaust.
The photo was taken by Maj. Clarence Benjamin of the 743rd Tank Battalion, the U.S. Army unit that after freeing the inmates tended to them on the tracks at Farsleben and arranged for their housing and follow-up care in Hillersleben.