Displaying: 21,476 21,500 of 35,382 matches for “1943”
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21476. Group portrait of members of a partisan battalion of the Armia Ludowa (communist, People's Army), most of whose members were Jews.
had some 34,000 members. In 1943 and 1944 units of the army carried out thousands of military and
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21477. Abba Kovner (center) poses with Ruska Korczak (left) and Vitka Kempner (right) on a street in Vilna the day of the city's liberation.
during the liquidation of the Vilna ghetto (September 1943), Kovner directed the escape of the Vilna
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21478. Basia (Gurfein) Berliner lights the candles at a family seder on Passover in the Landsberg displaced persons camp.
others were taken to a nearby tunnel, where they were shot. In 1943 Basia's sister Sala and her children
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21479. Gertrude Anker poses with her youngest daughter, Hilde in a Berlin park.
been deported from Berlin on March 12, 1943. Despite her conversion to Christianity, Kaethe was
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21480. Portrait of Dodi, Eva and Hilde Anker in their home in Berlin.
been deported from Berlin on March 12, 1943. Despite her conversion to Christianity, Kaethe was
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21481. View of the city of Danzig. The silo in the center of the photograph belonged to the Anker family.
been deported from Berlin on March 12, 1943. Despite her conversion to Christianity, Kaethe was
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21482. Unveiling of the tombstone of Nehemia Feiner, the donor's maternal grandfather.
Blechhammer, in March 1943, and then to Gleiwitz. Together Welek and Hinda were evacuated from the camp in
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21483. Portrait of Abba Kovner holding a gun in Vilna after the fall of the city to the Red Army.
during the liquidation of the Vilna ghetto (September 1943), Kovner directed the escape of the Vilna
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21484. Residents of the ghetto move to new housing after the Germans reduced the borders of the Kovno ghetto.
families shared a single apartment. Between August 1941 and September 1943, when the ghetto was converted
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21485. Residents of the ghetto move to new housing after the Germans reduced the borders of the Kovno ghetto.
families shared a single apartment. Between August 1941 and September 1943, when the ghetto was converted
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21486. Handwritten message to Hugo and Alexander Elbert ordering them to clean a meeting hall and set up tables and chairs for a Hlinka Guard gathering.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21487. A document ordering Alexander Elbert to voluntarily relinquish his license to own a radio.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21488. A letter from the Ministry of the Interior to Alexander Elbert ordering him to pay 1200 crowns to support the establishment and maintenance of concentration camps for Jews in Slovakia.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21489. A letter written by Vasi Berger, a friend of the Elberts to Gejza and Melania Elbert about the deportation of their children.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21490. A document ordering the Jewish proprietor, Gejza Elbert, to immediately hire an unemployed member of the Hlinka Guard to work in his general store.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21491. Document notifying Hugo Elbert that his drivers license has been revoked.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21492. A postcard sent by Hugo Klein, a friend of Hugo Elbert, to Melania Elbert.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21493. A postcard sent by Regina Kohn from a ghetto or labor camp in Firej, Poland to Gejza Elbert in Nemecka Lupca.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21494. A postcard from Alexander, Hugo and Alice Elbert, written during their deportation to Poland, to their parents and daughter, whom they had left behind in Slovakia.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21495. An official letter sent to Melania Elbert stating that she has left the Jewish religion.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21496. A list of possessions taken from the home of Hugo Elbert in March 1942 The confiscated items include: blankets, knitting wool, gloves, draperies, shawl, material for sewing, warm winter underwear, winter coats, comforters, sweaters, and trousers.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21497. Copy of a birth and christening certificate secured on May 30, 1942 for an eight-month-old Jewish child, Denise Elbert.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21498. A letter addressed to Gejza Elbert from the Ministry of the Interior ordering him to employ a member of the Hlinka Guard who would immediately assume complete control over his business.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21499. Vaccination card for inmate Melanie Elbert [misspelled Albert] issued by the Ghetto Theresienstadt health office.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca
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21500. A repair order issued by the optical workshop of the Theresienstadt ghetto health office to inmate Melania Elbert.
child to the mountains, where they remained for several months. In 1943 they returned to Nemecka Lupca