Experienced neonatologist and consultant.
Directed two Level III NICUs. Past Chair of Maryland AAP Committee on Fetus and Newborn and past Chapter President.
A hidden photograph from the Kovno Ghetto preserves a quiet moment between two young brothers whose lives were lived under extreme fear and uncertainty during World War II.
In 1944, five-year-old Avraham Rosenthal stood beside his younger brother Emanuel inside the ghetto, where daily life was defined by hunger, strict control, and constant danger. Even the presence of children was deeply fragile under Nazi policies.
Despite the risks, their uncle helped arrange for a secret photograph to be taken by ghetto photographer George Kadish, who documented life in hiding. Creating and preserving such images was dangerous, but it became an act of silent resistance and memory.
Not long after, both brothers were deported along with their family to the Majdanek concentration camp, where they were killed. The photograph survived the war and was later recovered, preserving a trace of lives that were nearly erased.
Today, the image stands as a reminder of how even the smallest records can hold the weight of entire lives and histories.
#HolocaustHistory
@samProton123@amanpour@LBpresidency@cnni You must gave missed the period after October 7th 2023 when Hezbollah began firing rockets into Israel causing displacement of the residents of Northern Israel.
The same people who call anyone who voted for Trump a Nazi are now lining up to defend an *actual Nazi* who proudly sported a tattoo of concentration camp guards for 18 years until he ran for office. And they have the audacity to pretend anything Trump did comes close to that.
@SullyCNBC The dedicated bike lanes. (which are a risk to pedestrians) and the reserved bus lanes reduced 3 or 4 lanes to 2. And then there are the double parked delivery trucks.
@RepThomasMassie So no response to Hezbollah rockets? Are you serious? Would you object to Kuwait or the UAE responding to attacks on their territory by Iran?