Displaying: 2,626 2,650 of 5,276 matches for “kristallnacht”
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2626. Portrait of Zimmerlinsky family in Nuremberg. The donor's mother, Rachel Zimmerlinsky, is pictured third from the left.
from September 1936 until it closed in November 1938. After Kristallnacht the children attended
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2627. Portrait of Moshe and Rachel Engelhard on the eve of their departure to Yugoslavia.
from September 1936 until it closed in November 1938. After Kristallnacht the children attended
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2628. Portrait of German Jewish refugees, Moshe and Rachel Engelhard, in Italy.
from September 1936 until it closed in November 1938. After Kristallnacht the children attended
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2629. Sister Huberte poses with a group of children, many of whom are Jewish children in hiding, at the Soeurs de Sainte Marie convent near Braine-l'Alleud.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2630. Ursula Klipstein and her mother pose with Sisters Catherine, Odile, Elisabette and Huberte at the Soeurs de Sainte Marie convent near Braine-l'Alleud, where Ursula was hidden during the war.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2631. Jewish girls who are living in hiding, study alongside Catholic students at the Soeurs de Sainte Marie convent school near Braine-l'Alleud.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2632. Ursula Klipstein poses holding the traditional Schultuete [a school cone] filled with candies on her first day of school.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2633. Ursula Klipstein does homework at a desk in her room.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2634. Ursula Klipstein (right) and a friend ride on scooters.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2635. Ursula Klipstein and her mother dress up as vagabonds.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2636. Ursula Klipstein and her mother dress in traditional Dutch costumes during a visit to Volendam.
Though no one in her immediate family was arrested during Kristallnacht, the pogrom persuaded Ursula
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2637. Clementine Pretzfelder looks out the balcony of her home in Burgkundstadt, Germany.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2638. Eugen and Nanette Wassermann sit on the steps of a building in Nuremberg.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2639. The three Wassermann sisters pose on a commercial street in Würzburg.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2640. Group portrait of Jewish refugee girls, who had come to England on a Kindertransport.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2641. Page of a ledger kept by Joseph Levinger of New York City itemizing the payments he made on behalf of Nanette Wassermann to facilitate her immigration to the United States from Panama.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2642. Membership card in the Juedischer Kulturbund, Berlin branch, issued to Nanette Wassermann (with the middle name of "Sara" imposed by the Nazis), entitling her to attend their cultural programs, including concerts, films and lectures.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2643. Postcard written by the German Jewish refugee, Eugen Wassermann, while he was in Moscow, but mailed from Yokohama, Japan.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2644. Postcard written by the German Jewish refugee, Eugen Wassermann, while he was in Moscow, but mailed from Yokohama, Japan.
Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, Eugen was arrested and taken to the Alexanderplatz. Nanette followed
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2645. Group portrait of German Jewish refugee children and their caretakers who came to England from the Netherlands.
Herzebrock, where they lived with relatives. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, their
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2646. Group portrait of German Jewish refugee children who had come to the Netherlands on a Kindertransport, shortly before their evacuation to Britain.
Herzebrock, where they lived with relatives. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, their
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2647. Document issued by the Gladbeck registry office certifying that the child Hans Robert Levy has assumed the new middle name of Israel.
Herzebrock, where they lived with relatives. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, their
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2648. Red Cross letter sent by a German Jewish refugee in Amsterdam to her grand nephews in Manchester, England that informs them of their parents' deportation to Theresienstadt and their new mailing address there.
Herzebrock, where they lived with relatives. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, their
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2649. Red Cross letter sent by a German Jewish refugee couple in amsterdam to their grand nephews in Manchester, England.
Herzebrock, where they lived with relatives. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9, 1938, their
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2650. German Jewish refugees pose with local residents in Siegfried Kaiser's butcher shop in Shanghai.
this task for almost two years until he was arrested on the day after Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau