Nursingy home ... elderly. You could try contacting a local veterans' association, too. Some of the guys are still around. I talked to one today. He was a B29 mechanic. Look around. If you see a guy who looks like he may be around 85 strke up a conversation with him. Don't say, how old are you? Say, what year were you born in? If he says 1920-1925, ask him if he was in the war. You may get some first hand accounts. Good luck. PS Don't expect these guys to be on the internet. Many people of that ages just don't use computers.
Any university with a modern history department will have a stocked library. All countries who were involved in the Holocaust have specialist collections. Also the USA has many.
There are no remaining survivors of WWI
The setting of the book "Survivors" by Allan Zullo and Mara Bovsun is World War II, specifically focusing on the stories of individuals who survived various harrowing experiences during the war. The book includes accounts from different locations and time periods within the larger context of the Second World War.
anywhere in the world
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You will have to go out into the world and witness to the people, that Jesus died for them and their sins.
World Wild Web - 2012 Serengeti Survivors 1-4 was released on: USA: January 2012
Giving interviews around the world.
The survivors of World War 1 would be in their late 100s or over 100 years old. Given that the war ended in 1918, most of the survivors would have been born before 1918 or during the early years of the war.
* There about 15 million Jews (adherents of Judaism) in the world. * By no means all of them are Holocaust survivors or descended from Holocaust survivors.
Only %20 of the world have bank accounts so approximately 8,550,633,750 people.
About 1 million in 2012