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2021 First Person Series: Estelle Laughlin

Conversations with Holocaust Survivors
Holocaust survivor Estelle Laughlin as a teenager (courtesy of Estelle Laughlin) and as an adult, today. US Holocaust Memorial Museum

Holocaust survivor Estelle Laughlin as a teenager (courtesy of Estelle Laughlin) and as an adult, today. US Holocaust Memorial Museum

Estelle Laughlin was ten years old when Nazi Germany invaded her hometown of Warsaw, Poland. It wasn’t long before more than 400,000 local Jews, including Estelle’s family, were forced into a tiny 1.3-square-mile ghetto in the city. In July 1942, Nazis began deporting the ghetto residents to the Treblinka killing center. Within two months, Estelle was one of the few children left alive.

Learn about Estelle’s experiences as a young Jewish girl under Nazi occupation and her parents’ resourcefulness, bravery, and resolve in trying to shield her from the unimaginable events they were experiencing.

Speaker
Estelle Laughlin, Holocaust Survivor and Museum Volunteer

Moderator
Bill Benson, Journalist and Host, First Person: Conversations with Holocaust Survivors

Watch live at youtube.com/ushmm. You do not need a YouTube account to view our program.

After the live broadcast, the recording will be available to watch on demand on the Museum's YouTube page.

First Person is a monthly hour-long discussion with a Holocaust survivor and is made possible through generous support from the Louis Franklin Smith Foundation, with additional funding from the Arlene and Daniel Fisher Foundation.