Displaying: 2,651 2,675 of 5,276 matches for “kristallnacht”
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2651. Portrait of the Wertheim family. Pictured are Julius and Hanna (Kaiser) Wertheim (the uncle and aunt of Sonja Kaiser) with their six children, Joseph, Julius, Ruth, Solly, Heinz, Rolf and Kerry.
this task for almost two years until he was arrested on the day after Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau
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2652. A group of young Jewish men wearing suits and ties sits outside around a table.
this task for almost two years until he was arrested on the day after Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau
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2653. Group portrait of Jewish children at a preschool in Frankfurt am Main.
this task for almost two years until he was arrested on the day after Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau
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2654. A Jewish family poses outside in their garden. Ruth (Kaufmann) Kaiser (right) poses with her mother, sister and nephew.
this task for almost two years until he was arrested on the day after Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau
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2655. Portrait of two Jewish brothers in Vienna. Pictured are Joseph and Theodore Brenig.
On November 9-10, 1938 during the Kristallnacht pogrom, Theo's father was arrested and sent to the
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2656. Reich Air Marshal Hermann Goering poses in front of the flag of the U.S.
Goering who instructed Heydrich to prepare a "General Solution" to the Jewish problem after Kristallnacht
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2657. Two Jewish refugee brothers walk down a street in Marseilles.
On November 9-10, 1938 during the Kristallnacht pogrom, Theo's father was arrested and sent to the
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2658. Two Jewish brothers pose with the adopted daughter of their German rescuer.
tailor and had a shop at Leibnitzstrasse 27 in Charlottenburg. During the Kristallnacht pogrom of
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2659. Major General Frank T. Schmidt (C.G. 3rd Division) delivers a speech at the rededication of a synagogue in Marburg.
synagogue in Marburg. The previous synagogue was destroyed during Kristallnacht. Also pictured is U
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2660. Major General Frank T. Schmidt (C.G. 3rd Division) and U.S.
destroyed during Kristallnacht. Major General Frank T. Schmidt (back table, center), and Mayer Abramowitz
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2661. A Jewish DP delivers a speech at the rededication of a synagogue in Marburg.
synagogue was destroyed during Kristallnacht. The Hebrew banner reads, "Open the gates to the Land of Israel."
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2662. View of the audience of American soldiers and Jewish DPs at the rededication of a synagogue in Marburg.
Marburg. The previous synagogue was destroyed during Kristallnacht.
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2663. Sara Berg poses with her nieces, Inge and Gisela Berg, on the family farm in Lechenich, Germany.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2664. Herman Meyer, a German Jewish emigre living in Holland, stands next to a cart in the cheese factory where he worked.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2665. A Jewish refugee family sails aboard the Usambara to Kenya.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2666. View of the Berg farm near Limuru, Kenya (Kiambu district), where the German Jewish family found refuge during World War II.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2667. Three Jewish refugee teenagers pose outside in Kenya.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2668. A group of Jewish refugees in Kenya pose next to their automobile while waiting for it to be repaired.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2669. Group portrait of students in the British school in Nairobi, Kenya.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2670. Two Jewish refugee children sit on the deck of the Usambara while en route to Africa.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2671. A Jewish child stands among the chickens on her parent's farm in Lechenich, Germany.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2672. Two Jewish sisters sit together at the dining room table in their parent's farmhouse after hearing about the family's plans to emigrate from Germany.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2673. A Jewish refugee farmer inspects the pyrethrum fields where his African farmhands are working.
one older sibling, Inge (b. 1929, now Inge Katzenstein). After the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9
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2674. Bertha Marx accompanies a group of Jewish refugee children, including her son Ernest, who have just arrived in Paris on a Kindertransport from Germany.
1936. Ernest had one older brother, Julius (b. 1922). On November 9, 1938 during the Kristallnacht
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2675. The Morgenstern family poses outside by a wooden fence.
after Kristallnacht, Ilse left Vienna for Holland never suspecting that this would be the last time she