Displaying: 3,626 3,650 of 3,869 matches for “guards”
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3626. Prewar family portrait Cecilia and Lajos Klein (grandparents of the donor) and their five children.
was able to pass by a human wall of Arrow Cross guards and respond to the question: are you a Jew? By
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3627. Letter addressed to Salamon Lebovics himself, from the Office of the Prime Minister informing him that he has been granted the Bronze rank of the Hungarian Freedom Medal.
was able to pass by a human wall of Arrow Cross guards and respond to the question: are you a Jew? By
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3628. Letter from the Hungarian Red Cross dated December 4, 1942, from the military department of the Red Cross addressed to Mrs.
was able to pass by a human wall of Arrow Cross guards and respond to the question: are you a Jew? By
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3629. Jewish youth work outside in a forced labor unit.
remained an observant Jew. On one occasion, his guards caught him praying with tallit and tefillin and
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3630. Yeshaya Kornbluh stands outside a barrack in a Hungarian labor camp.
remained an observant Jew. On one occasion, his guards caught him praying with tallit and tefillin and
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3631. Group portrait of students and rabbis at Yeshiva Meor Hagolah, the first postwar yeshiva in Italy established by Rabbi Ephraim Oshry of Kaunas, Lithuania.
remained an observant Jew. On one occasion, his guards caught him praying with tallit and tefillin and
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3632. Four women stand in front of the Agudat Israel Kibbutz in Bari.
remained an observant Jew. On one occasion, his guards caught him praying with tallit and tefillin and
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3633. Portrait of Lili Katz taken on Purim only months before she was murdered at Auschwitz.
was able to pass by a human wall of Arrow Cross guards and respond to the question: are you a Jew? By
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3634. Group portrait of prisoners in Ilag VII, a camp for foreign nationals.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3635. Prisoners either sort or open up bedding and bundles in the courtyard of Tittmoning castle.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3636. An unidentified prisoner stands underneath an American flag near the entrance to Tittmoning castle in preparation for one of the shows put on by prisoners.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3637. Two German officers stand on the road leading to Tittmoning castle.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3638. Freddy Johnson, an African-American jazz musician who was interned in Tittmoning from January 1942 until February 1944, plays the piano.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3639. Internees gather by the entrance to Tittmoning castle underneath the American flag for an official program.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3640. African-American musician and internee, Johnny Mitchell, plays his guitar in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3641. Group portrait of prisoners in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3642. The Victory Band performs in the Tittmoning camp after liberation.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3643. Group portrait of prisoners, one holding a small dog, in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3644. Father Sledz conducts religious services in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3645. Group portrait of prisoners in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3646. Group portrait of prisoners in the Tittmoning camp.
Cigarettes were valuable and were used for trade, even with German guards. In January 1945 the Rosenbaum
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3647. Rabbi Yehuda Lipot Meisels speaks at the dedication of the monument to the victims of the Pocking concentration camp.
froze and she couldn't walk. One day they were caught by a guard and told to report the next day for
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3648. Two survivors wearing their concentration camp uniforms stand at attention in front of the newly dedicated monument to the victims of the Pocking concentration camp.
froze and she couldn't walk. One day they were caught by a guard and told to report the next day for
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3649. Survivors attend a dedication of the future monument to the victims of the Pocking concentration camp following the exhumation and reburial of the victims .
froze and she couldn't walk. One day they were caught by a guard and told to report the next day for
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3650. Rabbi Yehuda Lipot Meisels (right) presides over an exhumation and reburial service of the victims of the Pocking concentration camp.
froze and she couldn't walk. One day they were caught by a guard and told to report the next day for