1993 photograph of house where Pincus lived before WWII and during his years in the ghetto. Because the house was located within the German-created map of the ghetto, Pincus did not have to move.
Photograph was taken at Fort Benning, Georgia in 1951. Pincus, not yet a U.S. citizen, was drafted and served two years in the army. He was stationed in Germany for six months.
Photograph was taken by the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society in January, 1947 while Renee and Michael were still aboard ship. The original photograph is in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.
This memo from the Union of Jewish Communities of Yougoslavia, Autonomous Relief Committee, Information Section, effectively ended Martha Bauer's search for her brother Rene. The Union of Jewish Communities had apparently cared for the group of immigrants that included Rene while they were refugees enroute to Palestine. After the German invasion of Serbia in the spring of 1941, the refugees were rounded up and put into a concentration camp near Sabac. Most of the men were executed over two days in October 1941 in the town of Zasavica.
Photograph was taken in Munich, Germany in 1946. Pincus is in the center of the photograph. His uncle, Chaskel Kolender, is standing in the back row, far right. The rest are friends (names not known).