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Eva Markowitz, 11, hugged her grandparents for the first time in over a year the week before Passover.
âIt feels amazing,â she said. âI miss hugging them because Iâm really close with my grandparents and they just make me really happy.â
As more grandparents are vaccinated against COVID-19, long-awaited visits with grandchildren â and the hugs that come with them â are finally happening. More than 75% of Americans aged 65 and older have received at least one vaccine dose, and more than 54% are fully vaccinated, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data released April 6.
Eva Markowitz performs a play, âDear Edwina,â for her grandparents, Norman and Hana Kahn, spaced several feet apart and outside.
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While ethnic expulsion wasn’t an official declaration in Russia, Poland and Ukraine in the late 1800s, Jewish families were realizing a not-so-subtle push to relieve them of their livelihood. Samuel Levy was a shop keeper who found he had no source of supplies.
Simon Henerofsky, a carpenter, was unable to even buy a new hammer or nails. David Korman, a dairy farmer, was helpless as the Russian soldiers took away his cows, leaving him with no source of income. Isaac Gurevitch lived on the Russian border, witnessed what was happening, so he just walked away from all he owned.