Displaying: 18,226 18,250 of 25,652 matches for “没毕业能做UWinnipeg留服留信认证加拿大UWinnipeg毕业证Q微信199959876办温尼伯大学毕业证成绩单Winnipeg本科硕士文凭Winnipeg研究生文凭改Winnipeg成绩单GPA学士硕士研究生学位证5WC4”
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18226. Women survivors in Bergen-Belsen watch British troops forcing former SS guards to bury corpses 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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18227. Female survivors in Bergen-Belsen use fresh water pumped into the camp by the British Army.
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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18228. Survivors rest on the ground of Bergen-Belsen after liberation.
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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18229. A pile of victims' shoes on the main street of 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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18230. Survivors in Bergen-Belsen rest outside a barrack.
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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18231. Jews assembled by Romanian police and soldiers during the Iasi pogrom sit among corpses in the courtyard of the city police headquarters.
June 29, when a total of 5,000-6,000 Jews had been assembled. Then, between 2:30 and 3:00 p.m., a
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18232. Polish firefighters and SS officers in the Warsaw ghetto during the suppression of the uprising.
the Poniatowa labor camp, and between 5,000 and 6,000 were sent to the Trawniki camp. The Warsaw Jews
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18233. Residents of the ghetto move to new housing after the Germans reduced the borders of the Kovno ghetto.
Ghetto Action," on May 1, 1942 and on October 5, 1942. During the initial move into the ghetto Jews were
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18234. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with the daughter of their rescuers, Lydia van Buggenhout outside the van Buggenhout farmhouse in Rumst, Belgium.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18235. Annette and Margo Lederman pose with an allied soldier in front of the cafe owned by Edouard van Buggenhout.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18236. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout, outside the cafe owned by the van Buggenhouts.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18237. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with the daughter of their rescuers, Lydia van Buggenhout, and an allied soldier in Rumst, Belgium.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18238. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with one of the sons of their rescuers on a street in Rumst, Belgium.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18239. Rajala Lederman walks along a street in Brussels with her daughter Annette.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18240. Margo and Annette Lederman pose with dolls given to them by their rescuers, Clementine and Edouard van Buggenhout.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18241. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout near the van Buggenhout home.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18242. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, walk along a street in Rumst, Belgium with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18243. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose in a tree on the farm of the van Buggenhout family.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18244. Formal portrait of Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, taken in the home of the van Buggenhout family.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18245. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, walk along a street in Rumst, Belgium with their rescuers, Clementine and Lydia Buggenhout.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18246. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, play in the yard of the van Buggenhout home in Rumst, Belgium.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18247. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, sit on the lap of one of the van Buggenhout boys on the farm in Rumst, Belgium.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18248. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children who lived in hiding with the van Buggenhout family during the war, pose with Clementine van Buggenhout, during a visit to her home after their removal to a Jewish orphanage.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18249. View of the van Buggenhout family home located at Mechelseoteenweg 82 in Rumst, where Margo and Annette Lederman lived in hiding during the war.
to Belgium. Annette was born in St. Gaudens, France on June 5, 1940. The family returned to
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18250. The bodies of Jews killed during the Iasi pogrom lie on the pavement in front of a Jewish-owned business.
June 29, when a total of 5,000-6,000 Jews had been assembled. Then, between 2:30 and 3:00 p.m., a