Leonardo haberkorn hitler biography

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  • 776. Studio portrait of the family of Wolf Percik. Pictured from left to right are (standing) Rosalie Percik Lubawski, Zygmunt Percik, Dora Percik, Ludwik Lew Percik, Maximilian Percik, and Henry Percik; (seated) Stanislaw Lubawski, Irena Percik Rosenkrantz, Wolf Percik, and Felicia Percik.

    pictured, only Irena Percik Rosenkrantz and Stanislaw Lubawski survived the Holocaust.

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  • 777. Group portrait of the extended Rotenberg-Widowsky family, Bobover Hasidim Pictured are Haim Widowsky (originally Rotenberg) at the bottom with his cousins, his father Yehuda Rotenberg (wearing fur hat, second from left on top), his mother Sara nee Widowsky with white collar.

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  • 778. Meeting of a group of Belgian Jews. [It is unclear if this is wartime or postwar.] Among those pictured are Yitzchak Kubovitsky (third from left), Israel Tabakman (fifth from left facing camera with glasses), Nahum Pomerantz (third from right), Izak Szattan (second from right) and Fela Perelman at the far right.

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  • 779. Performance of the Kovno g

    Hitler lives in Uruguay. Yes. In this eastern republic of South America lives a Hitler Aguirre and a Hitler da Silva. There’s Hitler Pereira and Hitler Edén Ganoso. There’s even a Hitler de los Santos—”of the Saints.” Though only six such names appear in the national phone book, it’s hard to know how many other Hitlers have a phone or how many prefer to be listed under different names in order to avoid being misjudged or mocked. To be called by the surname of the perpetrator of the worst genocide of the twentieth century—that is, Hitler—wouldn’t that give one cause for shame?

    “No one knows that’s my name,” Luis Ytler Diotti confesses over the phone. He keeps his middle name a family secret, as his father advised him when he was a child.  Everyone knows him as Luis, period.

    Hitler Pereira’s case is similar: those who know him call him Waldemar, his middle name. His son, who picks up the phone, refuses to connect me to his father: there’s nothing to talk about.

    Juan Hitler Porley declines to be photographed: “I’m don’t want to advertise this,” he says, distrustfully.

    I interview

    A Nazi eagle inflames a heated debate in Uruguay

    MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — A big Nazi eagle with a swastika under its talons is such a divisive symbol that it has been kept hidden inside a sealed crate in a Uruguayan navy warehouse for more than a decade.

    The 800-pound bronze piece was part of the stern of the German battleship Admiral Graf Spee that sank off the South American country’s coast at the outset of World War II. Controversy has swirled around the eagle ever since it was recovered in 2006, and now a battle has broken out over its fate after the government asked lawmakers and Uruguay’s Jewish community what it should do with it.

    Suggestions have ranged from exhibiting or auctioning the Third Reich symbol to keeping it hidden or even destroying it. The debate rages as far-right demonstrations, including the one in Charlottesville, Virginia, have created fears of a rise in neo-Nazism.

    “Our concern is that the eagle doesn’t generate a Nazi sanctuary in Uruguay that will draw Nazis from all over the region,” said Israel Buszkaniec, presid

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