Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

These children were found by the Red Army amid the ruins of a Russian village in the Kharkov area after it had been recaptured from the Germans. The Nazis had destroyed every habitation of the village and taken the parents of the children with them. Hundreds of such war orphaned children are being adopted by Soviet families and are being sent to child colonies behind the Urals.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19420722.2.8.1

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 171, 22 July 1942, Page 3

Word Count
67

These children were found by the Red Army amid the ruins of a Russian village in the Kharkov area after it had been recaptured from the Germans. The Nazis had destroyed every habitation of the village and taken the parents of the children with them. Hundreds of such war orphaned children are being adopted by Soviet families and are being sent to child colonies behind the Urals. Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 171, 22 July 1942, Page 3

These children were found by the Red Army amid the ruins of a Russian village in the Kharkov area after it had been recaptured from the Germans. The Nazis had destroyed every habitation of the village and taken the parents of the children with them. Hundreds of such war orphaned children are being adopted by Soviet families and are being sent to child colonies behind the Urals. Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 171, 22 July 1942, Page 3