Displaying: 23,101 23,125 of 32,377 matches for “深圳罗湖区区品茶(V电✅16511000789老李✅)【快速安排】最靠谱的外围模特经纪3IJBbnVs958”
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23101. Engagement photo of Zofia Zajd and Jakub Berkowitz, taken one year before their marriage.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23102. Polish rescuer Genowefa Starczewska-Korczak holds Celina Berkowitz, the Jewish child she protected during World War II.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23103. A Jewish child in hiding (center) poses with the daughters of her Polish rescuer, Genowefa Starczewska-Korczak.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23104. Portrait of Celina Berkowitz while in hiding in a Polish orphanage in Czestochowa.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23105. Group portrait of Jewish girls who are members of the "Kwuza Yehudit," a unit of the Hanoar Hatzioni Zionist youth movement in Lodz.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23106. Portrait of Jakub and Zofia Zajd Berkowitz six months after their wedding.
March 3, 1920 in Dzialoszyce, Poland, where her father owned a shoe store. Zofia had four siblings
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23107. First class Portugese ship ticket for Ursula Seligmann.
arrived in the United States on December 3, 1941, just days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
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23108. Letter from the Belgian Committee to Assist Jewish Refugees to Walter and Guenther Seligmann of Washington, D.C.
arrived in the United States on December 3, 1941, just days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
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23109. One page of a booklet produced by a member of the hachshara (Zionist collective) Kibbutz Buchenwald, featuring a group portrait of members of the collective taken beneath the Kibbutz Buchenwald banner.
first sixteen members took possession on June 3. Kibbutz Buchenwald as founded on principles of
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23110. Portrait of Palestinian Jewish parachutist Ephra Dafni.
immigration to Palestine in the immediate post-liberation period. [Source: Encyclopedia of the Holocaust: 3
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23111. Alicja Fajnsztejn and her cousin Ryszyard ride their bicycles in front of their summer home in Mlociny, outside of Warsaw.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23112. A Polish rescuer hugs the Jewish child she is hiding during a family outing in the country.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23113. Zofja Fajnsztejn, a Jewish child in hiding, plays with a Polish child in a Warsaw park.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23114. Two Jewish sisters who are living in hiding in Warsaw, pose for a formal portrait at the time of the younger girl's First Communion.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23115. Zofja Fajnsztejn, a Jewish child in hiding, poses outside in a garden wearing her First Communion dress.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23116. Portrait of Zofja Fajnsztejn, a Jewish child in hiding in Warsaw.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23117. Alicja and Zofja Fajnsztejn, two Jewish sisters in hiding, pose with their rescuers, Helena and Josef Biczyk.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23118. Portrait of Izaak and Malka Fajnsztejn with their daughters, Alicja and Zofja, in the Warsaw ghetto.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23119. Alicja Fajnsztejn poses with a group of friends before their departure by train to Bremen.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23120. Alicja Fajnsztejn (right) poses with two friends on a balcony of a building in the Foehrenwald displaced persons camp.
was born October 3, 1929 in Warsaw, where her father was an engineer. She had one sister, Zofja (b
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23121. Religious Jews wearing armbands at forced labor sweeping the cobblestone streets.
concentration camp, where they were soon killed. In November 1942 only about 3,000 Jews remained in the Rzeszow
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23122. Wedding portrait of Leo and Emmy (Stelzer) Krell in The Hague.
who had moved to Holland. Leo was born on September 3, 1913 and moved with his parents to Holland as
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23123. Circumcision certificate for Robert Krell signed by Anton Polak, mohel for the Jewish community in The Hague.
who had moved to Holland. Leo was born on September 3, 1913 and moved with his parents to Holland as
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23124. Portrait of Gertrude Nölting, the German midwife who hid Henri and Horst Taucher during the final years of the war and continued to care for them after the liberation.
Both were born in Berlin: Henri on January 3, 1932, and Horst on January 29, 1933. Their father had
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23125. Portrait of Siny Natkiel at a "tea party".
three more children, Froukje (b. 1/10/48), Berry (b. 3/14/50), and Lydia (b. 9/7/57). Siny continued