The Righteous: The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust

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Authors: Martin Gilbert
kindness of many strangers’
    Klarsfeld, Serge: and the war against French Jewish children
    Klass-Aronowitz, Selma: recalls her rescuer
    Kleiba, Father: shelters Jews
    Kleiman, Lidia: in hiding
    Klein, Annie and Charles: in hiding, with the daughter of their rescuer, Photo
    Klein, Maria: given sanctuary
    Klejnot, Estera: given refuge
    Klepacka, Maria: her act of rescue
    Klepacka-Donalis, Helena: recognized as Righteous
    Kleparow (Lvov): a rescuer in, executed
    Klepinin, Father: helps Jews; arrested
    Klibanski, Bronka: pays tribute to a rescuer
    Klima, Mrs: helps hide a Jewish couple
    Klin, David: recalls help given to Jews
    Klipstein, Irma and Leo: find refuge
    Klipstein, Ursula (Janine Gimpleman Sokolov): in hiding
    Klukowski, Dr Zygmunt: records fate of a Righteous Pole
    Knapp, Max and Ans: help save a Jewish child
    Knies, Hildegard: a rescuer, in Berlin
    Knochen, SS Colonel: protests at Italian refusal to adopt German view of ‘the Jewish question’ protests at Italian sabotage of anti-Jewish measures
    Kobilnitsky, Lew: rescues Jews
    Koehler, Max: a rescuer, in Berlin
    Kohl, Max: a German rescuer
    Kolacz, Andrzej: hides six Jews
    Kolacz family: rescuers
    Kolacz, Stanislawa: brings water for Jews in hiding
    Koldiczewo (eastern Poland): a rescuer imprisoned at
    Kolin (Czechoslovakia): a survivor from
    Kolomyja (Eastern Galicia): Jews saved in; an escapee from
    Kongsvinger (Norway): a route to safety through
    Konieczny, Joseph (and his sons Stach and Sender): shelter seventeen Jews
    Konieczny, Mrs: shot
    Kontsevych family: shelter Jews
    Kontsevych, Tanka: her ‘humaneness’
    Kopacsi, Sandor: hides seven Jews
    Koren, Pastor Emil: helps Jews in Budapest
    Koreniuk, Marie: helps Jews in hiding
    Korkuc, Kazimierz: helps Jews
    Korkuciany (Poland): Jews find refuge in
    Korkut, Dervis: refuses to collaborate
    Korkut, Servet: and a rescue stratagem
    Korn, David: and the noble acts of Pastor Kuna
    kosher food: provided for Jews in hiding
    Koslowska, Krystyna: recognized as Righteous
    Kosovo (Yugoslavia): Jews deported from
    Kosow (Eastern Galicia): a Jewish girl hidden in
    Kossak, Zofia: and the Council for Assistance to the Jews; Photo
    Kostopol (Poland): an escape from
    Kostowiec (Poland): an orphanage at
    Kostrze (Poland): a ‘kind’ German at
    Kovno Ghetto (Lithuania): Jews rescued from; a survivor of, and an act of kindness in Dachau; a survivor of, and an act of kindness in a slave labour camp
    Kowalski, Colonel Wladislaw: his rescue efforts
    Kowicki, Janka: and a Jewish girl in hiding
    Kowicki, Sophie and Emil: rescuers
    Kozlovsky, Kostik: helps Jews
    Krakinowski, Miriam: saved
    ‘Kraler, Mr’: a rescuer’s pseudonym
    Kramarski, Alojzy: a Polish ‘benefactor’
    Kranz, Zygmunt and Franciszka: saved, with their son
    Kranzberg, Pessah: hidden, with his family
    Krasucki, Irena: takes in a new-born infant
    Kraszewski, Bianka: in hiding
    Krell, Robert: recalls his Dutch rescuers
    Kremenchug (Russia): a Righteous Russian in
    Kremer, Akiba: given shelter, then murdered
    Kreuzlingen (Switzerland): women released from a concentration camp reach Switzerland through
    Kristallnacht: Jewish refugees from; and a prayer ‘for the Jews’ and a Nazi Party member’s contempt for
    Krol, Mulik: rescued
    Kron, Gita: her daughter saved
    Kron, Ruth: saved
    Kron, Tamara: deported
    Krosney, Mary Stewart: recounts the story of a French rescuer
    Kruja (Albania): Jews find refuge in
    Krupinksi, Jerzy and Aniela: given sanctuary
    Kryvoiaza, Alexander: saves Jews
    Kryzhevsky, Fedor: saves Jews
    Ksiaz Wielki (Poland): seventeen Jews hidden in
    Kubran, Jack: saved
    Kubran, Lea: saved
    Kudlatschek (a Sudeten German): helps Jews
    Kugler, Victor: a rescuer, betrayed
    Kujata, Father Michael: hides a Jewish girl; Photo
    Kukuryk, Wladyslaw: shelters two Jews
    Kuna, General: a liberator
    Kuna, Pastor Vladimir: helps Jews
    Kurjanowicz, Ignacy and Maria: save Jews
    Kurpi, Bronislawa: saves a four-year-old boy; Photo
    ‘Kurpi, Stanislaw Henryk’: an

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