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RELIEF [1] [2] [3] [4]
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The eyes of this old lady of the Vasilievka village may say a lot. |
A standard card to donate a food package. The procedure was simple: a benefactor paid 10 dollars either in the US or in Europe on the name he wanted that package to be sent to. Then the payment massage would be sent to Russia at the nearest package center where the lucky could get. |
This is a standard American food package distributed among the population in Russia. It could support a family consisting of four people to live for four weeks. Totally, 1163296 packages (10 dollars each) were sent and distributed in Russia. |
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Instructions about the ARA’s child feeding policies. |
A child reception center. Reading Bible, sent from the US |
Samara. The ARA headquarters.
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The ARA shipped to Russia huge medical supplies and equipments. Some of them (like neosalvarsan) were totally new and unheard of. There is a portrait on the wall: it is Mr. Hoover, not a comrade Lenin. |
The ARA District Manager Donald Renshaw in one of the open kitchen in Moscow arranged by Americans for children mass feeding on the base of equality of race, religion, social origin. |
In the line for the ARA’s food packages. Odessa. |
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In waiting for the opening of a kitchen for children. |
A washing collective house free of charge, opened by the ARA in Ufa. The ARA brought in hundreds of tons of washing and sanitary facilities, clothes, linens, shoes, etc. |
Hoover administers the shipping of humanitarian goods to the post-war Europe (New York). |
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[1] [2] [3] [4]
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