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18151. Adele Bassfreund, the sister of Ismar Bassfreund, embroiders a cloth.
widow. Shanghai at that time was one of only a few places that had open borders to refugees. Whilst in ... Wolfram came to England with his wife Dolly and had one daughter.
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18152. Studio portrait of four-year-old Marion Bassfreund holding her doll.
widow. Shanghai at that time was one of only a few places that had open borders to refugees. Whilst in ... Wolfram came to England with his wife Dolly and had one daughter.
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18153. Sigi (Siegfried) Kulmann works in a workshop as a furrier.
widow. Shanghai at that time was one of only a few places that had open borders to refugees. Whilst in ... Wolfram came to England with his wife Dolly and had one daughter.
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18154. Identification card issued to Marion Basfreund and stamped with a red J for Jude and the added middle name of "Sara".
widow. Shanghai at that time was one of only a few places that had open borders to refugees. Whilst in ... Wolfram came to England with his wife Dolly and had one daughter.
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18155. Postcard sent by Erich [last name unknown] to Herbert Hoexter and another friend Lothar in the Kitchener Camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18156. Portrait of Herbert Hoexter standing on the Strand promenade in Ramsgate not far from the Kitchener refugee camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18157. Herbert Hoexter, a German-Jewish refugee, stands on the grounds of the Kitchener refugee camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18158. Three German-Jewish refugees stand in front of a barracks in the Kitchener camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18159. Group portrait of members of hut 41/1 in the Kitchener camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18160. Herbert Hoexter and another gentleman sit outside at a small table in the Kitchener refugee camp.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18161. Birth certificate issued to Selma Hoexter on December 15, 1938 with Nazi seals on the bottom.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18162. Birth certificate reissued to Selma Hoexter on April 12, 1939 with Nazi seals on the bottom.
Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger ... sister Herbert Hoexter was born on January 28, 1906 to Robert and Selma Hoexter. He had one younger
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18163. Oral history interview with Păun Zgonea
passed through; going from one village to another; how the adults harvested crops in one village; the
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18164. Oral history interview with Pavel Zgonea
Jews on the construction of a bridge; how one day as they were working, four of the Jews from his team ... taken one day by the soldiers, after which he heard gun shots but did not see anything; working in
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18165. Oral history interview with Jevdokija Odineca-Gavrilika
accidentally burned down by a Soviet grenade; how no one knew when or how the Jewish population was rounded up ... the other children with the hope of finding gold or anything else; one child who found a wooden leg
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18166. Oral history interview with Margaret Guiness
two of her sisters, her brother-in-law, and their two children; one of her brothers being hanged at ... people dying quickly and easily; finding one of her other sisters at Bergen-Belsen; sharing a bunk with
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18167. Oral history interview with Dora Langsam
Army; the conditions for Jews after the German invasion in September 1939; how one of her brothers died ... trying to protect their father from the Germans and one of her sisters with her newborn baby was taken
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18168. Oral history interview with Genia Klapholz
uniform factory for one year, enduring terrible conditions; moving next to the Szebnie transit camp, where ... Silesia; how this family was recognized as one of the “Righteous among the Nations” by Yad Vashem in 1991
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18169. Oral history interview with Božena Růžičová
Bozena Ruzickova (née Ruzickova), born on January 20, 1924 in Sobotka, Poland, describes being one ... prisoners; marching in the snow and the shooting of those who lagged behind; falling behind and one of the
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18170. Oral history interview with Avram Avramovic
where the Jews were lined up and the tenth person was shot; his memories of one Austrian soldier named ... given instructions to go to the island of Brač on June 1, 1944; one particular conflict, which involved
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18171. Oral history interview with Esther Blatt
Republic); work and life in the camp; an explosion in the bomb factory and the death of one of the German ... guards; the lack of work and being sent to the fields to dig holes one day and filling in the holes the
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18172. Oral history interview with Nella Radunsky
living in one room with her mother’s sister and her three children; learning for the first time that she ... ceremony and subsequent 35 years together; living with his aunt, then her mother in one room; having two
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18173. Oral history interview with Izrail Bersutsky
Jewish school until age five; being the oldest and having one brother and two sisters; his father making ... and grain; being given 400 grams of brown bread per person a day; living in a one-room clay hut with
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18174. Oral history interview with Henny Sundo and Peter Ilsøe
one of its vessels, the “Gerda III” in rescue efforts; guiding Jews to the vessel at night over the ... which became an unofficial element of the Danish government after August 29, 1943, and one of its
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18175. Oral history interview with Elsa Lustgarten
transmitting information from Symek Draenger to other members of the group; one of the first tasks given to ... stillborn son and her father expressing relief that at least the Germans would have one less Jewish child to