
A hand-tinted photograph of Frieda Greinegger and Julian Noga as a young couple. The two had met when Julian, a forced laborer from Poland, arrived at the Greinegger farm in northern Austria. In 1941, the Gestapo sent both to concentration camps after learning of their forbidden friendship. Place uncertain, after 1945. Photograph »
Formal portrait of Frieda Greinegger holding a bouquet of flowers. In 1946, Frieda married Julian Noga, a Polish forced laborer who had been assigned to work on her father's farm in northern Austria. In 1941, the Gestapo had sent both Frieda and Julian to concentration camps as punishment for this forbidden friendship between an Austrian and a Pole. Place and date uncertain. Photograph »
Frieda Greinegger during a family outing to a park in the mid-1930s. Frieda would later spend almost two years in the Ravensbrueck concentration camp as punishment for consorting with a Polish forced laborer, Julian Noga. Austria, ca. 1935. Photograph »
The Greinegger family, shown here in a formal portrait, were prosperous farmers in northern Austria. During World War II, the son died as a soldier in the German army. The second youngest daughter, Frieda, spent almost two years in Ravensbrueck concentration camp for consorting with a Polish forced laborer, Julian Noga. Frieda and Julian married after the war. Place and date of photograph uncertain. Photograph »