Displaying: 4,601 4,625 of 8,566 matches for “dachau”
-
4601. Portrait of U.S. Army chaplain, Rabbi Abraham Klausner, in a dining room.
army in June of the following year and became the first Jewish chaplain to enter the Dachau
-
4602. A group of young people in Eisiskes. Back row from right to left: Shepske (Shabtai) Sonenson, Zlatke Kaganovicz, Zvi Hirshke Schwartz.
South America. Dov (Berele) Wolotzki survived Dachau. Shepske (Shabtai) Kabacznik survived the
-
4603. A Saturday night party at the home of Dina Weidenberg.
Shepske in hiding. Dov was liberated from Dachau. Kreinele was killed by members of the AK, including
-
4604. Japanese-Americans with the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion pose outside the Kehlsteinhaus (also known as the Eagle's Nest).
and Hawaii. Units of this battalion liberated prisoners on one of the death marches from Dachau near
-
4605. Close-up portrait of the cantor of the Breisach synagogue.
Breisach to Dachau on November 10, 1938. He was tortured and died in a hospital in Freiburg on Feburary 1
-
4606. Group portrait of the faculty and board members of the Real Gymnasium in Kaunas.
Dr. Kissim (the science teacher who died in Dachau, far right), Lena Rachmilevitch (second from right
-
4607. Articles from "The golden age" and the "Yearbook of Jehovah's Witnesses" and other publications relating to the persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses during the Holocaust
Dachau (Concentration camp)
-
4608. Selected records of the Swedish Red Cross
Buses" were sent by Sweden to Germany to bring liberated camp prisoners from Sachsenhausen, Dachau
-
4609. Franz Kusserow family papers
Dachau (Concentration camp)
-
4610. Oral history interview with Ruth Finder Zaidband and Morris Zaidband
Dachau (Concentration camp)
-
4611. German Air Force collection
the cold water experiments conducted by Dr. Sigmund Rascher in the Dachau concentration camp.
-
4612. Jung family photographs
was sent on a “death march” to Gross Rosen and from there he was sent to Dachau concentration camp
-
4613. Paul Blank photograph collection
was transferred to the Dachau concentration camp on 5 April 1945 and liberated in May while on a death
-
4614. Bettelheim family collection
Bettelheim during his imprisonment in the Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps between May and September
-
4615. Schmidt family collection
described his ordeal in the Dachau concentration camp after Kristallnacht, dated April 26, 1939; a letter
-
4616. Giovanni Palatucci collection
and deported to Dachau, where he died on February 10, 1945. In 1955, he was posthumously awarded a
-
4617. Laura Varon photographs
perished. Laura was later transferred to Dachau, and then sent on a death march to Bergen-Belsen, where she
-
4618. Heinz Loewy postcard
Columbia, Lichtenburg, Dachau, and Buchenwald. He was released from Buchenwald on 4 January 1939. He fled
-
4619. "The United States Army's War Crimes Trials Program in Post-World War II Germany and Austria"
almost exclusively at the former Dachau concentration camp, as well as a history of the trials themselves
-
4620. "An Absence of Closure"
Dachau, and from there, to Muhldorf. They were liberated by the American Army on April 30, 1945, returned
-
4621. Morris Gastfreund papers
survivor of several camps including Dachau, Buchenwald, and Skarzysko-Kamienna. He was liberated from
-
4622. George and Shari Fine papers
(George Fine) in Dachau concentration camp and Sari Marmor (Fine) as a slave laborer in Poland during the
-
4623. COHASCO collection
postwar Dachau visitor's pass; search requests for Holocaust survivors; one 1944 Belgian Jewish
-
4624. Dr. Joachim Neander collection
Auschwitz nach Dachau, als Zugange unter dem 10. Oktober 1944 registriert," by Joachim Neander," Reference
-
4625. Between life and death
Linkaich, being an inmate of the Nazi concentration camps of Stutthof and a subcamp of Dachau, suffering on