Virus Outbreak Lives Lost Polish Brothers
Virus Outbreak Lives Lost Polish Brothers
FILE - In this July 1946 file photo mourners crowd around long a narrow trench as coffins of victims of an anti-Semitic massacre are placed in a common grave following mass burial service, in Kielce, Poland. The July 4,1946, massacre killed 42 people, most of them Jews, and wounded over 80. The last known living survivor of the massacre, Joseph Feingold, died from complications from the coronavirus in New York in April. (File/Fox Movietone)
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Virus Outbreak Lives Lost Polish Brothers
FILE - In this July 1946 file photo mourners crowd around long a narrow trench as coffins of victims of an anti-Semitic massacre are placed in a common grave following mass burial service, in Kielce, Poland. The July 4,1946, massacre killed 42 people, most of them Jews, and wounded over 80. The last known living survivor of the massacre, Joseph Feingold, died from complications from the coronavirus in New York in April. (File/Fox Movietone)
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FILE - In this July 1946 file photo mourners crowd around long a narrow trench as coffins of victims of an anti-Semitic massacre are placed in a common grave following mass burial service, in Kielce, Poland. The July 4,1946, massacre killed 42 people, most of them Jews, and wounded over 80. The last known living survivor of the massacre, Joseph Feingold, died from complications from the coronavirus in New York in April. (File/Fox Movietone)