Hiwi ([ˈhiːviː]), the German abbreviation of the word Hilfswilliger or, in English, auxiliary volunteer, designated, during World War II, a member of different...
16 KB (1,630 words) - 09:28, 20 August 2024
Hiwi refer to: Hiwi (volunteer), POWs of occupied nations who volunteered to help the Nazis Hiwi al-Balkhi, 9th century exegete and critic of Bible Hiwi...
610 bytes (98 words) - 16:34, 24 July 2023
The Hiwi people inhabit the vast flatlands between the Meta and Vichada rivers in Colombia. They call themselves the “people of the savannah”. In Venezuela...
3 KB (425 words) - 16:39, 25 August 2023
Ḥiwi al-Balkhi (9th century) (Hebrew: חיוי אל-בלכי, also Hiwwi or Chivi) was an exegete and Biblical critic of the last quarter of the ninth century born...
14 KB (2,149 words) - 08:29, 29 August 2024
Hiwi may refer to the following languages: Guahibo language, a Guahiban language of Colombia and Venezuela Waia language, a Trans-Fly language of Papua...
411 bytes (74 words) - 16:57, 1 July 2020
battalions. Some 1,000 Hiwis are known to have run away during field operations.: 366 Although the majority of Trawniki men or Hiwis came from among the...
39 KB (3,871 words) - 13:52, 26 September 2024
Jake Te Hiwi is a New Zealand rugby union player, currently playing for the Highlanders and Otago. His preferred position is centre. Te Hiwi attended Otago...
4 KB (194 words) - 02:44, 11 June 2024
thousand Hiwis who returned home to USSR. Most were sentenced to Gulags, and released under the Khrushchev amnesty of 1955. The number of Hiwis tried in...
25 KB (2,245 words) - 21:44, 7 August 2024
Te Rangihiwinui Tauroa CMG JP (29 May 1927 – 11 December 2018), known as Hiwi Tauroa, was a New Zealand rugby union player and coach, school principal...
9 KB (730 words) - 22:05, 12 October 2024
Treblinka was managed by 20 to 25 SS overseers (Germans) and 80 to 120 Hiwi guards of various Soviet ethnicities, including Russian and Ukrainian Red...
17 KB (1,955 words) - 20:11, 11 October 2024