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        Sisters who survived Holocaust reunited
        (Agencies)
        Updated: 2005-02-07 14:09

        Sisters Hannah Katz, 78, left and Klara Blaier, 81, are seen in this photo made Saturday and released by Yad Vashem on Sunday Feb. 6, 2005. Katz and Blaier, two sisters who survived the Holocaust and moved separately to Israel in 1948, each unaware the other had survived, were reunited after 61 years with the help of a high-tech data base, a spokeswoman from the Israel Holocaust memorial said Sunday Feb. 6, 2005. (AP
        Sisters Hannah Katz, 78, left and Klara Blaier, 81, are seen in this photo made Saturday and released by Yad Vashem on Sunday Feb. 6, 2005. Katz and Blaier, two sisters who survived the Holocaust and moved separately to Israel in 1948, each unaware the other had survived, were reunited after 61 years with the help of a high-tech data base, a spokeswoman from the Israel Holocaust memorial said Sunday Feb. 6, 2005. [AP]
        JERUSALEM - Two sisters who survived the Holocaust and moved separately to Israel were reunited after 61 years with the help of a high-tech database, a spokeswoman from the Israel Holocaust memorial said Sunday.

        Estee Yaari of the Yad Vashem Heroes and Martyrs Memorial Authority said Klara Blaier 81, and Hannah Katz, 78, moved to Israel in 1948, each unaware that the other had survived the Nazi slaying of 6 million Jews during World War II.

        Yaari said the two had last seen each other in Hungary in 1944, shortly after their parents sent them from their home in the former Czechoslovakia to live with relatives. The two women could not be reached for comment.

        "On Thursday, Hannah Katz's granddaughter was looking for information about Katz's mother on our Internet database," Yaari said. "All of a sudden she discovered that Katz's sister, Klara Blaier, was living about 85 miles away in northern Israel. They were reunited the next day."

        The Yad Vashem database contains information on about 3 million Holocaust victims, Yaari said. It was added to the Yad Vashem Internet site last year.



         
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