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18526. Levi Visser poses outside a barracks in Westerbork.
her husband Sam and her son Jacob remain unknown. Schoontje also had 5 other siblings. Levi Visser (b
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18527. Jewish refugees and Dominicans attend the inauguration of the El Choco aqueduct in Sosua, which made possible the utilization of this mountainous region in Sosua for cattle raising.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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18528. Jewish refugees make purchases in 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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18529. Jewish refugees read newspapers and magazines in the reading hall of the Sosua settlement.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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18530. A Jewish refugee stands between two cots in the men's barracks at the Sosua settlement.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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18531. A Jewish refugee living in the Sosua settlement distributes milk to a Dominican youth in El Batey.
(Of the 5,000 Dominican visas issued between 1940 and 1945 only 645 Jews actually made their way to
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18532. A man walks through a wooded area near Bergen-Belsen filled with rows of corpses of prisoners who perished there.
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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18533. An American soldier oversees German civilians forced 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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18534. British soldiers force German civilians to bury corpses in a mass grave in Bergen-Belsen.
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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18535. Decomposing corpses strew the grounds 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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18536. Wartime portrait of a French-Jewish family. From left to right are Suzanne, Henri, Rosette, Gittle, Shimon and Sarah Rivka Bomblat.
(b. Warsaw 12/7/19), Rosette, (b. Paris 11/20/24), and Suzanne (today Niomi, b. 5/14/28). The Bomblat
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18537. Group portrait of American soldiers given by an American-Jewish liberator to a French-Jewish family whom he befriended.
(b. Warsaw 12/7/19), Rosette, (b. Paris 11/20/24), and Suzanne (today Niomi, b. 5/14/28). The Bomblat
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18538. Identification card issued to Rosette Bomblat in the Drancy concentration camp where she stayed for two weeks prior to her deporation to Auschwitz.
(b. Warsaw 12/7/19), Rosette, (b. Paris 11/20/24), and Suzanne (today Niomi, b. 5/14/28). The Bomblat
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18539. Three German-Jewish siblings pose outside their home in Rimbeck, Germany.
Walter (b. August 16, 1921) and a sister named Inge (b. April 5, 1925). The Fischels were religious Jews
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18540. A young German-Jewish boy poses outside his home with his dog in Rimbeck, Germany.
Walter (b. August 16, 1921) and a sister named Inge (b. April 5, 1925). The Fischels were religious Jews
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18541. A German-Jewish boy poses outside his home in Rimbeck, Germany with his parents on the occasion of his bar mitzvah.
Walter (b. August 16, 1921) and a sister named Inge (b. April 5, 1925). The Fischels were religious Jews
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18542. Close-up portrait of a German-Jewish man with a shaved head shortly after his release from four weeks in the Buchenwald concentration camp.
Walter (b. August 16, 1921) and a sister named Inge (b. April 5, 1925). The Fischels were religious Jews
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18543. Exterior view of the Israelitisches Gartenbauschule, a Jewish boarding school in Ahlem.
Walter (b. August 16, 1921) and a sister named Inge (b. April 5, 1925). The Fischels were religious Jews
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18544. Portrait of three Jewish siblings taken shortly before they were taken into hiding.
younger siblings, Claude (b. 1/30/38) and Nicole (b. 5/24/39). The family was close-knit and loving, and
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18545. Polish-Jewish immigrants pose with their young daughter and a friend in a field near Paris.
younger siblings, Claude (b. 1/30/38) and Nicole (b. 5/24/39). The family was close-knit and loving, and
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18546. Polish-Jewish immigrants pose in an outdoor market with the suits they have sewn.
younger siblings, Claude (b. 1/30/38) and Nicole (b. 5/24/39). The family was close-knit and loving, and
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18547. A French-Jewish girl poses outdoors in new clothing she received for a wedding in a public institution in Saint Amand en Puisaye, where she was in hiding.
younger siblings, Claude (b. 1/30/38) and Nicole (b. 5/24/39). The family was close-knit and loving, and
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18548. Post-war studio portrait of two Jewish sisters who had been hidden in separate institutions in France.
younger siblings, Claude (b. 1/30/38) and Nicole (b. 5/24/39). The family was close-knit and loving, and
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18549. A young girl waters her garden in the Stuttgart displaced person's camp.
the next 5 years they made their life in the Stuttgart displaced persons (DP) camp. The life of the
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18550. Postwar family of a Dutch Jewish family. Pictured on the left is Sigmund Kleerkoper in his army uniform and his wife seated behind him.
August 5, 1942 to retrieve Elisabeth, just one week after her third birthday. She brought her to the