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Deliverance
註釋Contains a diary written by Maik (1897-1967) in 1942-45, mostly while hiding in a bunker. Maik, who was born in Sokoly, Poland, describes the first German occupation in 1939, followed by the burning of Jewish homes and the murder of many Jews, and the second occupation in June 1941, followed by Nazi anti-Jewish measures. Discusses activities of the Judenrat, forced labor, the fate of relatives and friends, and the resistance activities of his son, Moshe. In November 1942 most of the Jews were murdered, including Maik's wife. Maik managed to flee to the forest and joined his son, who was hiding in a bunker on a farm with two friends. When the Sokoly Sokoly cemetery was desecrated soon after, the three young men sneaked into the town and set it afire, destroying much of it. The men remained in hiding until the liberation in August 1944. They and other survivors returned to Sokoly, but moved to Bialystok in February 1945, after an attack by Poles in which seven Jews were killed. Maik and his son emigrated to Israel in 1949.