LOLLYPOP
Hilda Stone's birth name is Hess, Hilda.
Hilda Anthony's birth name is Hilda Antonietti.
Bea Egeto is 5' 7".
Bea Rouse is 5' 4".
Elie Wiesel had three siblings - two sisters, Hilda and Bea, and one younger sister, Tzipora.
Elie Wiesel's sisters from oldest to youngest when he was a child are Hilda (Oldest), Bea, and Tzipora (Youngest). Hlida is the oldest sibling followed by Bea, then Elie, and finally Tzipora. Elie Wiesel is the only son in the family.
In 1947, he began to study French with a tutor. By chance, Wiesel's sister, Hilda, saw his picture in a newspaper and got in touch with him. Months later, Wiesel was also reunited with his sister Bea in Antwerp. I found this at: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Wiesel.html
His younger sister (Tzipora) and mother (Sarah) were killed in a gas chamber in the first camp that they reached. His two older sisters, Hilda and Beatrice, survived the War. His father, Schlomo, died only a few weeks before their camp was liberated.
Elie Wiesel's older sister was named Hilda. She, along with his younger sister Tzipora, died during the Holocaust while the family was in concentration camps.
Hilda and Bea were freed on April 29, 1945, by American soldiers who liberated the concentration camp they were in, which has become known as the Dachau concentration camp. The exact date of their escape may vary depending on individual circumstances and accounts.
They were sent to Auschwitz along with Elie and the rest of the Wiesel family
Tzipora Laskov was born in 1904.
Tzipora Laskov died in 1989.
Tzipora Obziler was born on 1973-04-19.
Eliezer, his parents, and his sisters are crammed into a closed cattle wagon with 80 others, with no light, little to eat or drink, barely able to breathe. Men and women are separated on arrival. Eliezer and his father are sent to the left; his mother, Hilda, Beatrice, and Tzipora to the right. He learned years later that his mother and Tzipora were taken straight to the gas chamber.
Elie Wiesel's parents were named Shlomo and Sarah Wiesel. They were both Orthodox Jews. His father ran a grocery store and was very active in the community, and his mother took care of him and his three sisters (Hilda, Beatrice, and Tzipora) at home.