Fourteen-year-old Laura Korn from Budapest was deported to Auschwitz in 1944, where her life ended with her parents.
Laura Korn was born on January 1st, 1930, in Budapest, Hungary, into a Jewish family. She was the daughter of Aleksander and Tereza Korn, growing up in a city known for its cultural life and strong Jewish community before the war changed everything
In her early years, Laura experienced a relatively normal childhood, surrounded by family and the rhythms of city life. But as she entered her teenage years, Hungary—like much of Europe—became engulfed by the expanding reach of Nazi control and antisemitic persecution
By 1944, the situation for Jewish families in Hungary had become catastrophic. Mass arrests, forced deportations, and the rapid implementation of the Holocaust in the region led to the destruction of entire communities in a very short period of time
Laura and her parents were arrested and deported to Auschwitz. Upon arrival at the camp, the family was murdered. Laura was only fourteen years old. She never had the chance to grow into adulthood or experience the life that once lay ahead of her
Today, Laura Korn is remembered among the millions of children who were killed during the Holocaust. Her story stands as a remind
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La Voyager 1 fue lanzada en 1977 y, casi medio siglo después, sigue alejándose de la Tierra. Hoy es el objeto creado por la humanidad que se encuentra más lejos, viajando a través del espacio interestelar tras haber cruzado la heliopausa en 2012
Su distancia es tan enorme que ya no se expresa solo en kilómetros, sino en cuánto tarda la luz en recorrerla. Actualmente, una señal de radio —que viaja a la velocidad de la luz— necesita alrededor de 23 horas y media para llegar hasta la nave
Esto permite entender mejor la idea de “23 horas luz”: no es una velocidad, sino una distancia. Es decir, Voyager 1 está tan lejos que la luz, lo más rápido que existe, tarda casi un día completo en cubrir ese trayecto. Y como la comunicación funciona en ambos sentidos, recibir una respuesta implica esperar prácticamente el doble
Para ponerlo en perspectiva, la luz del Sol tarda unos 8 minutos en llegar a la Tierra. Incluso los planetas más lejanos del sistema solar están a solo unas horas luz. Pero Voyager 1 ya se acerca a una escala aún mayor: la de un “día luz”, una distancia cercana a los 26 mil millones de kilómetros
Y aun así, sigue enviando información. Sus señales, increíblemente débiles después de recorrer esa inmensidad, son captadas por antenas en la