Displaying: 5,551 5,575 of 53,057 matches for “photographs”
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5551. A postcard sent by Anka Leah Tenenbaum in the Warsaw ghetto to her sister and daughter in Chicago.
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5552. A receipt for a food package sent by Estera Tenenbaum to her Uncle Szmul Kliger in the Warsaw ghetto.
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5553. A notice sent by the Max Sosewitz shipping service to Estera Tenenbaum, notifying her that a food package has been sent to her family in the Warsaw ghetto.
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5554. A receipt for a food package sent by the donor to her father, Jonas Tenenbaum, in the Warsaw ghetto.
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5555. A receipt for a food package sent by Estera Tenenbaum to her brother's father-in-law, Lazer Warszawski, in the Zdunska Wola ghetto.
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5556. A group of Jewish women at the entrance to the Brody ghetto.
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5557. A letter written on a Hungarian Red Cross correspondence form by Czeslava (Harmelin) Sauber to her sister Marie (Harmelin) Auerbach, an internee on the Isle of Man in England.
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5558. An American soldier views a German slogan scrawled on the side of a building which reads: "Fuehrer give the order, we will follow."
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5559. View of the synagogue in the village of Delmenhorst, near Bremen.
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5560. Document certifying the marriage of Selma Stiefel and Josef Zwienicki on July 12, 1916.
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5561. Portrait of Mrs. Barbanilova, one of the women who hid Rozia Grossman during her three years of hiding in and around Warsaw.
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5562. A group of Czech Jewish women pose together in a doorway.
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5563. Local residents watch as flames consume the synagogue in Opava, set on fire during Kristallnacht.
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5564. Eugene Goldberger vacations at Luhacovice.
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5565. Portrait of the Baron family in the yard of their home in Sirvintos, Lithuania.
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5566. Portrait of Helen, age one, and her parents Tova and Izik (Yitzchak) Verblunsky.
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5567. Latvian passport belonging to Gitta Schadur, the donor's aunt, who emigrated to Germany in 1931.
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5568. Latvian passport belonging to Gitta Schadur, the donor's aunt, who emigrated to Germany in 1931.
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5569. View of the bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
The bunker was discovered by the Germans one day before this photograph was taken. The bunker was, in ... After the war the informer was identified as E. Heijink and tried as a collaborator. The photographer
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5570. View of the bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
The bunker was discovered by the Germans one day before this photograph was taken. The bunker was, in ... After the war the informer was identified as E. Heijink and tried as a collaborator. The photographer
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5571. View of the bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
The bunker was discovered by the Germans one day before this photograph was taken. The bunker was, in ... After the war the informer was identified as E. Heijink and tried as a collaborator. The photographer
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5572. A vent that was installed in a bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
region in 1942-1943. The bunker was discovered by the Germans one day before this photograph was taken ... collaborator. The photographer was a Dutchman, who was ordered to take pictures of the bunker the day after
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5573. View of the bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
The bunker was discovered by the Germans one day before this photograph was taken. The bunker was, in ... After the war the informer was identified as E. Heijink and tried as a collaborator. The photographer
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5574. Dirk and Leida Wassink, members of the Dutch Reformed Church who hid Sallie and Zadok Zion in their home on and off for two years.
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5575. Cover page of a notebook of correspondence between the three Zion brothers, who were in hiding in two different locations in the vicinity of Eibergen, Holland.