tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2582017881897857199.post6538249722020769871..comments2023-11-09T01:39:18.680-08:00Comments on Yiddish Leksikon: AVROM-YITSKHOK GRAFMANUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2582017881897857199.post-2270476583885536612020-11-15T15:02:16.494-08:002020-11-15T15:02:16.494-08:00Have any of AVROM-YITSKHOK poems been translated i...Have any of AVROM-YITSKHOK poems been translated into English? My husband's Aunt Adele Gryholc Jochelson met Avrom in Vilnius after the city was overtaken by the Germans. He said that he had been able to escape from Warsaw and wanted to travel to the Kovno Ghetto with their family. He helped Adele and her little sister Tola Grynholc Urbach to survive at the ghetto until he was likely selected for one of the two Riga Aktions for slave labor (Feb 6, 1942; Oct 20-22, 1942). The two sisters never learned what had happened to him. Miraculously, the two sisters are still alive and living in New Jersey. bevhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02852181278954249810noreply@blogger.com