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23276. Salek Liwer (center) with friends at a Dror Zionist youth movement seminar in the Bad Gastein displaced persons camp.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23277. Salek Liwer reading the Russian newspaper, Pravda, in his room in Bukhara.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23278. The speakers podium at the second conference of the Dror Zionist youth movement in Austria, held at the Bindermichl DP camp.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23279. Jewish refugees who had spent the war in the Soviet interior, leave Bukhara on the Rosja-Polska transport.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23280. Newly arrived Jewish DPs from eastern Europe are gathered near the Enns River in Austria.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23281. David Bromberg poses at the entrance to a barrack in the Ebensee displaced persons camp.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23282. Zionist leader Yitzhak Tabenkin at a Dror conference in the Geretsried displaced persons camp.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23283. Salek Liwer (right) with Szyjek Mandel on a snowy street in Lodz.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23284. Ignac Greenbaum (right) with two other Jewish refugees who joined the Polish Army that was formed in the Soviet Union during the war.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23285. Group portrait of Dror Zionist youth at a seminar in the Bindermichl displaced persons camp.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23286. Szmuel and Lonia Liwer during a winter holiday in Krynica.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23287. Szmuel and Lonia Liwer with their son Salek.
One year later, the Soviets announced a general amnesty and the Jewish refugees were allowed to move
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23288. Class portrait of teachers and pupils at a preschool in Copenhagen.
Goldberger (top row, second from the left), one of the only Jewish children in the class.
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23289. The judges of the Military Tribunal I during a session of the Medical Case (Doctors') Trial in Nuremberg.
its judgment on August 20, finding fifteen of the defendants guilty, seven not guilty and one guilty
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23290. The defendants (left), their lawyers (center), the Military Tribunal I (right), and the prosecution (bottom), listen to the proceedings at a session of the Medical Case (Doctors') Trial in Nuremberg.
its judgment on August 20, finding fifteen of the defendants guilty, seven not guilty and one guilty
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23291. Identification card issued to Lotte Gottfried Hirsch by the Czernowitz County Office of Jewish Affairs, authorizing her to remain in Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23292. Identification card issued to Lotte Gottfried Hirsch by the local police identifying her as a Jew (Evreu).
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23293. Lotte Gottfried poses with friends and relatives at a resort in Iacobeni.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23294. Samuel Hellreich and Lotte Gottfried on vacation on Tsetsina Mountain near Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23295. Lotte Gottfried and Willy Schwartz on the Herrngasse, a commercial street in Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23296. Friedricke Gottfried and P. Jitariu on the Herrngasse, a commercial street in Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23297. Portrait of Eduard Bong with his mother in a park.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23298. University of Czernowitz student identification card issued to Friedricke Gottfried for the school year 1927-1928.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23299. Lotte Gottfried (top row, right) with her classmates at the Hoffman gymnasium in Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one
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23300. Lotte Gottfried with her classmates at the Hoffmann gymnasium in Czernowitz.
Max Gottfried. She was born May 16, 1918 in Czernowitz, where her father was a lawyer. Lotte had one