thumb|Vedem magazine Vedem (We are leading) was a Czech-language literary magazine that existed from 1942 to 1944 in the Theresienstadt Ghetto in the ghetto of Terezín during the Holocaust. It was hand-produced by a group of teenaged boys, among them editor-in-chief Petr Ginz and Hanuš Hachenburg. Altogether, about 800 pages of Vedem survived World War II.
thumb|Vedem magazine Vedem (We are leading) was a Czech-language literary magazine that existed from 1942 to 1944 in the Theresienstadt Ghetto in the ghetto of Terezín during the Holocaust. It was hand-produced by a group of teenaged boys, among them editor-in-chief Petr Ginz and Hanuš Hachenburg. Altogether, about 800 pages of Vedem survived World War II.
== History of the magazine == thumb| Home L417, now houses the Ghetto Museum The Theresienstadt Ghetto is known for its rich cultural life. Several boys' houses had their magazines, and Vedem is the best known among them. The magazine was written, edited, and illustrated entirely by young boys, aged twelve to fifteen, who lived in Home L417 (Heim L417, also "Boys' Home 1", a former school building). The boys referred to the house as the Republic of Shkid. The content of Vedem included poems, essays, jokes, dialogues, literary reviews, stories, and drawings. The issues were then copied manually and read around the house. For some time, it was also posted on the house bulletin board; however, it was decided to discontinue this practice because it was deemed dangerous in case of SS inspections.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).