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Lea Bálint and Adoption
1938?-
Polish-Israeli survivor of the Shoah
Balint spent part of World War II living under an assumed name in a Polish convent in Brwinow, near Warsaw. Her parents placed her there when she was five and she emerged at the end of the war. Unusually, her father survived the war.
After the war she emigrated to Israel where she is director of The Bureau of Children without Identity which attempts to help other child survivors of the Shoah trace their original identities and families.
References
Lappin, Elena. "The Man with Two Heads," Granta, 66 (Summer 1999), pp. 7-65 Pyrich, Elzbieta. "Jewish Convent Children Thanking their Christian Saviors," Warsaw Voice, 21 September 1997. Also available at: [1]
Indexes
Categories:
- Adopted Persons
- European
- Jewish
- Israel
- Poland
- 20th Century
- Civil Rights, Advocacy
- Social Services and Social Sciences
- Birth Identity Disputed or Deliberately Concealed
- Ethnic or Religious Identity Confused or Concealed, Racism
- Exile or Persecution (religious, Political or Social)
- Pre-school Years
- War or Persecution
- Priest, Religious, Teacher, Coach, Mentor, Patron, Apprentice Master or Owner
- Others ("Strangers")
- Trans-Racial, Trans-Tribal, International or Trans-Cultural Adoption or Fostering
- Temporary Care
- Institutional Care
- Parents Married (or Partnered) to Each Other
- Always in Contact or Knew Identities