Fun himlen blayene tsu bloye teg
A companion volume to A Shtetl In Ek Velt (2011), a collection of autobiographical writings about life in the pre-war enclave of Jewish Carlton. The ships stopped coming in late 1939 and did not resume until 1946, bringing the second wave of Jewish, mostly Jewish speaking, immigrants. These are their stories of survival in diverse and extraordinary circumstances. They are a poignant testimony to the human capacity to rise from the ashes to build meaningful, even joyful lives. The newcomers more than doubled the Jewish population of the shtetl in ek velt and despite the trauma thay had endured, helped shape the vibrant social and cultural life of Yiddish Carlton .
1. Manny Shadur
2. Sarah Loebenstein
3. Aaron Ninedek
4. Bette Pulver
5. Rifka Kaufman
6. Ruth Friede
7. Harry Frydenberg
8. Judy Szwarcburg
9. Moshe Morris
10. Jack Librach
11. Chelemer Landsmanshaft in Australia
12. Julie Meadows
13. Ezra Kowadlo
14. Harry Better
15. Paul Grinwald
16. Jacqueline Shadur
17. Lily Skall
18. Dina Webb
19. George Oshlack
20. Rosa Oshlack
21. Henry Buch
22. Ruth Waisberg
23. Eva Slonim
24. Kitia Altman
25. Doris Brett
26. Shirley Glance
27. Bronka and Ida Kaplan
28. Adele Meren
29. Leon Piterman
30. Charlie Teperman
31. Sam Jablonka
32. Ida Gurvis
33. Nechama Werdiger
34. Nathan Werdiger
35. Theo Balberyszski and Deborah Zuben
36. Sonia Hornstein
37. Mary Rodder
38. Rachel Caplan
39. Anush Friede
40. Arthur Szwarcburg
41. Cyla Hartman
42. Serge Liberman
43. Helen Granek
44. Alan Hartman
45. Leon Piterman.