Displaying: 6,601 6,625 of 8,566 matches for “dachau”
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6601. Maier Rajnsztajn holds a name card intended to help any of his surviving family members locate him at the Kloster Indersdorf DP camp.
liberated while on a death march towards Dachau.
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6602. Members of the Irgun Brit Zion Zionist youth movement in the Kovno ghetto.
Dachau, a small group came together in the last months of the war to produce a few issues of Hanitzotz
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6603. Two youths working in a woodworking shop in the Kovno ghetto.
arrival. Daniel was then transferred to Dachau, where he stayed less than a week before his transport of
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6604. Group portrait of Austrian Jewish refugees on Klesciceva Street in Samobor, northern Croatia.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6605. Document issued to Haim Ellenboghen, the donor's father, by the Jewish Relief Committee of Topusko, certifying that he is a delegate of that Committee on a mission to Bari, and that all authorities are to offer him assistance in the carrying out of his tasks.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6606. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6607. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6608. Document from the American Consul-General in Vienna certifying that the Trost family, consisting of Josef, Alice, Dorrit, and Erika, applied for American visas on September 15, 1938 and have been placed on the waiting list with the numbers 47291-47294.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6609. Portrait of Dorrit Trost (b. 1929), the niece of Herma Ellengoghen, as an Austrian-Jewish refugee living in Belgium.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6610. Portrait of Dorrit (behind) and Erika Trost, the two nieces of Herman Ellenboghen, as Austrian-Jewish refugees living in Belgium.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6611. Portrait of Alice (Ellenboghen) Trost and her daughter Dorrit, living as Austrian-Jewish refugees in Belgium.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6612. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6613. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
other Jewish employees and the deportation of the owner and his son to Dachau. At this time Herma
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6614. The Kusserow family home in Bad Lippspringe. The family kept religious materials in the right side of the trunk of the car and distributed them from it as well.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6615. Magdalena, Paul-Gerhard, and Elisabeth attend to a lamb in the yard of the Kusserow family home in Bad Lippspringe.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6616. The Kusserow family home in Bad Lippspringe after the sign "Read the Golden Age [magazine]" on the side of the house was removed.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6617. Paul-Gerhard Kusserow with a knapsack behind the family home in Bad Lippspringe.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6618. The garden behind the Kusserow family home in Bad Lippspringe, where the Kusserow children hid religious literature from the Gestapo during searches.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6619. Annemarie Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested by the Gestapo in October 1944 and was a prisoner until 25 May 1945, well after the end of the war.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6620. Wilhelm Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested and shot in Muenster because of his refusal to serve in the German military.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6621. Elisabeth, Hans Werner, and Paul Gerhard Kusserow at home in Bad Lippspringe.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6622. Elisabeth Kusserow in Bad Lippspringe one year after her liberation.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6623. Hans-Werner Kusserow in Bad Lippspringe one year after his liberation.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6624. Paul-Gerhard Kusserow in Bad Lippspringe one year after his liberation.
Karl-Heinz (b. 12/7/1917) spent five years in Dachau. Waltraud (b. 10/5/1919) spent two and a hal years
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6625. The Virovitch family gathers at the Kovno train station to bid farewell to Abrasha Virovitch who was immigrating to Palestine.
Dachau.