
As we need to strengthen the memory of the six million with the passing of time the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum put out a Passover Photo archive of Jewish life in Prewar Europe titled “Tell Your Son So You Should Remember”.
Indeed on Passover as we celebrate the leaving of Egypt and becoming a nation we can take the time out to celebrate the personal miracles of survival today. People can recount how their grandparents or great grandparents survived the war, picked up the pieces of their shattered lives and rebuilt life and humanity after witnessing the ultimate inhumanity.
Look at the pictures and multiply them by 6 million. And then be thankful we are here today! 

Passover Greeting Card, Lobomel Poland 1919

Passover Food Disribution, Vienna , Austria 1921

Baking matzot at the home of the Mentsz family in Solotina, Czechoslovakia, in 1935

Jewish soldiers and members of the Staszow community, Poland, during a Passover seder organized by the community before the war.

 This and the following matzoh bakinig pictures are from the Herzog factory in Berlin, Germany, 1936



Matzos being prepared and baked by hand

Passover Seder in Vilna, Poland, April 1940

Seder for Jewish soldiers in the Polish army, Chojnice, Poland, 1939

A family photograph at the Seder table in Riga, Latvia, before the war (the Khayat, Chait family)

The Buchhalter family (family of the photo submitter) during a Passover Seder in Warsaw, Poland, 1933 

The Gottstein  and Fleischer families. Photographed between 1933-1938
The pictures are taken from Yad Vashem's “Tell Your Son” exhibition.
During the week we will publish a collection of pictures from the Passover holiday that was celebrated before, during and after the war years.
