Displaying: 19,351 19,375 of 25,909 matches for “杭州临平区大保健哪有养生会所一条龙全套上门(V电✅16511000789老李✅)【快速安排】最靠谱的外围模特经纪5NLwcvR5142”
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19351. Group portrait of Jewish DPs in Deggendorf, Germany posing under a Zionist banner which reads, "Eretz Israel [the Land of Israel] for the Nation Israel," in Hebrew and English.
Austrian border, where he was liberated on May 5. Hinda and Welek were reunited in August 1946 at the DP
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19352. View of the quarry at the Flossenbuerg concentration camp, taken during a return visit to the camp on the first or second anniversary of the liberation by Jewish DPs living in the city of Weiden, Germany.
Austrian border, where he was liberated on May 5. Hinda and Welek were reunited in August 1946 at the DP
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19353. A sign marking a mass grave in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19354. Survivors in Bergen-Belsen cook over an open fire next to a mound of shoes.
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19355. View of the crematorium oven at Bergen-Belsen. The original caption reads "The furnace in the crematorium where the Germans burned the bodies of their thousands of victims."
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19356. Former SS guards prepare corpses for burial in a mass grave.
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19357. Captured SS guards, under British guard, load the corpses of prisoners who died in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19358. Group portrait of members of the Zettlitz hachshara with a framed picture of Theodor Herzl.
Austrian border, where he was liberated on May 5. Hinda and Welek were reunited in August 1946 at the DP
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19359. Karola Topor and Leon Fischmann visit the grave of their father, Isaak Fischmann, in Czestochowa.
internment camp, where he remained less than two weeks before being sent to Drancy. On November 5, 1942 Leo
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19360. Leo Bretholz with his sisters Henny and Ditta and cousin, Sonja Topor.
internment camp, where he remained less than two weeks before being sent to Drancy. On November 5, 1942 Leo
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19361. Wedding portrait of Minna and Sam Goldstein, the aunt and uncle of Leo Bretholz.
internment camp, where he remained less than two weeks before being sent to Drancy. On November 5, 1942 Leo
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19362. Leo Bretholz poses with Netty and Anny Frajermauer in the village of Cauterets.
internment camp, where he remained less than two weeks before being sent to Drancy. On November 5, 1942 Leo
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19363. British soldiers look on as survivors wash up at a make-shift pumping station in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
1.5 miles apart. Camp No. 2 was opened only a few weeks before the liberation, on the site of a
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19364. Young mothers take their babies for a stroll in the Landsberg DP camp.
concentration camp where he was in a "Straffe Kommando" (Punishment Commando). On May 5, 1945, the American
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19365. Jewish kindergarteners and five teachers and aides in a classroom at the Landsberg DP camp.
concentration camp where he was in a "Straffe Kommando" (Punishment Commando). On May 5, 1945, the American
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19366. Three men look out from behind bars at the Bayonne camp in Sosua.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19367. Jewish refugees work in a straw factory making handbags for export to America.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19368. Jewish refugees living in the Sosua refugee colony deliver milk and bananas in a horse-drawn wagon.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19369. Group portrait of the staff of the El Colmado general store in Sosua.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19370. Felix Koch (left) and his workers prepare to drill in the forests near Sosua.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19371. Herbert Levi, manager of the general store in Sosua, paints a chair while his wife Kaethe peels an apple.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19372. A Jewish refugee in Sosua works in a distillery. Pictured is Ernest Schreiner.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19373. Jewish refugees work in the fields in Sosua.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19374. A Jewish refugee admires the view of the bay in Sosua.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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19375. Group portrait of the Jewish police in the Bindermichl displaced persons camp.
short time later on a forced march to the Gunskirchen subcamp. On May 5, 1945 Willie was finally