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10376. Walter Meyer describes activities of members of the Edelweiss Pirates in Duesseldorf, Germany
His father, an anti-Nazi, refused to allow Walter to enter one of the Adolf Hitler Schools, but did
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10377. Walter Meyer describes his 1943 trial for looting, and the impact of his role in the Edelweiss Pirates on the sentence he received
His father, an anti-Nazi, refused to allow Walter to enter one of the Adolf Hitler Schools, but did
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10378. Chaim Engel
the Germans invaded Poland. After a few weeks he was taken as a POW. One
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10379. Michael von Hoppen Waldhorn
Drancy for six months. In July 1942, one month after Jews were required to wear a Jewish star in public
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10380. Jacob Polak
simply on our way to "resettlement in the east." Most children attended class for only one week before
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10381. Maria Sava Moise
Maria was one of four children born to poor Roma ("Gypsy") parents
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10382. Robert T. Odeman
One year later the Nazis shut it down, charging that it was politically subversive. Robert then moved
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10383. Karl Gorath
as a nurse, he was transferred to work at the prisoner hospital at the Wittenberg subcamp. One day, a
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10384. Ita Grynbaum
town in east-central Poland. Their small one-story house served as both the family's residence and
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10385. Berthold Mewes
Berthold could write one letter every six months to either his mother or father. But in 1943 he was
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10386. Magdalena Kusserow
One of 11 children, Magdalena was raised as a Jehovah's Witness
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10387. Hans Heimann
Italy in 1939. 1940-45: Hans and his family settled in Genoa. One day in 1940 two Italian
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10388. Ivo Herzer
refugees; the Italians were shielding many Jews. Ivo's family was even invited to one of their army
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10389. Gisha Galina Bursztyn
Fearing the German roundups, Gisha decided to hide in one of the ghetto's makeshift bunkers. During a
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10390. Carl Heumann
Carl was one of nine children born to Jewish parents living in a village near the Belgian border
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10391. German territorial losses, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
and one-tenth of its population (between 6.5 and 7 million people).
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10392. Monique Jackson
because conditions were dangerous, but she missed her parents very much. One day, sensing that Monique was
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10393. Bertha Adler
false papers and rented them a house in a nearby village. There, Bertha's father fell ill one Friday
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10394. Fanny Judelowitz
shooting Jewish men. Fanny's father was one of them. On December 15, 1941
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10395. Jacob Gamper
Germany invaded Latvia and reached Liepaja in one week. The Nazis immediately began rounding up Jewish
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10396. Bella Judelowitz
Liepaja and opened a dry goods store. The couple had 10 children, one of whom died in infancy. 1933
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10397. Daniel Judelowitz
Liepaja, on the Baltic coast, and opened a dry-goods store. The couple had 10 children, one of whom died
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10398. Betty Leiter Lauchheimer
Betty was one of 14 children born to a religious Jewish family in Aufhausen, a village in
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10399. Sara Galperin
Sara, born Sara Bernstein, was one of six children in a Jewish family in the Lithuanian village
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10400. Rachel Lea Galperin
In 1938 Rachel's husband died. One year later, on September 1, 1939, Germany