camp and a hand written map he gave her detailing their path to safetyfrom siberia to uzbekistan, to india then iranand finally israel>> "we were welcomed with oranges - they were like gold, they were oranges." >> "often times people have items in their homes but they don't necessarily know the significance of it or perhaps they know it had a very personal significance and then they bring it here it has kind of a collective significance." >> reporter: the map now hangs in the yad vashem museumit turns out the item highlights a piece of holocaust history shared by 900 polish youthwho all ended up in a jewish camp in iran known as one of the tehran childrenilana is now 80 every year there are fewer and fewer survivors left to tell their stories. those who donated to this project hope these fragements of their lives will help society remember what happened to them during one of history's darkest chaptersand prevent it from ever happening again. sara sidner, jerusalem. at embassy suites, you get more delicious moreness every morning with a free breakfast made just the way you like it. with a breakfast like this, you coul