Displaying: 12,051 12,075 of 19,651 matches for “survive”
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12051. The newly married couple, Herman de Leeuw and Annie Pais, pose with members of the wedding party shortly after the ceremony.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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12052. Female survivors peel potatoes in a barracks in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12053. Group portrait at an OSE Home for DP children in Draveil.
sister, Dora, survived. Hermine reunited with her after Dora emigrated from the USSR in 1970.
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12054. A religious Jewish family poses in a park in Mukachevo.
Aside from Manci, no other members of Rella's family survived the war.
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12055. Dr. David Arolianski treats a patient in his clinic in the Kovno ghetto.
delousing in the ghetto's bathhouse. Because the survival of the ghetto depended on the community's ability
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12056. Dr. David Arolianski works at his desk in his clinic in the Kovno ghetto.
delousing in the ghetto's bathhouse. Because the survival of the ghetto depended on the community's ability
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12057. Children at an OSE home enjoy a meal outside.
sister, Dora, survived. Hermine reunited with her after Dora emigrated from the USSR in 1970.
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12058. Jewish children at the OSE home in Draveil.
sister, Dora, survived. Hermine reunited with her after Dora emigrated from the USSR in 1970.
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12059. A group of survivors pose in front of the memorial sign erected by the British Army after the liberation of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12060. Members of the Ringelheim family pose in their kitchen in Jaroslaw, Poland.
Rosenzweig, a Polish Jew from Krakow, who had survived the war as a member of the Anders Army. He invited
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12061. A Jewish couple poses in the kitchen of their home in Jaroslaw, Poland.
Rosenzweig, a Polish Jew from Krakow, who had survived the war as a member of the Anders Army. He invited
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12062. An elderly Jewish couple poses on the balcony of their home in Przemysl, Poland.
Rosenzweig, a Polish Jew from Krakow, who had survived the war as a member of the Anders Army. He invited
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12063. Group portrait of three Jewish cousins on a balcony in Jaroslaw, Poland.
Rosenzweig, a Polish Jew from Krakow, who had survived the war as a member of the Anders Army. He invited
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12064. View of the site of mass graves in Bergen-Belsen.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12065. Bar Mitzvah portrait of a religious Jewish youth in Mukachevo.
Aside from Manci, no other members of Rella's family survived the war.
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12066. A survivor in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp sits on a mound of earth near the camp fence and cries out in pain.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12067. In the foreground Fritz Klein, a former SS doctor in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, makes an announcement for British newsreels while behind him SS guards are bury prisoners' corpses in a mass grave.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12068. A section of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
of the relief operations. Surviving Jewish DPs were transferred to Camp Three on May 21, 1945 from
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12069. Dr. Pavel Eppstein, Chairman of the Theresienstadt Jewish council (Aeltestenrat), greets the newly arrived transport of Dutch Jews.
Only a portion of the original film survived. [Source: Zdenek Lederer, "Terezin," in "The Jews of
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12070. Four Jewish women pose on the balcony of their apartment located on Klopstockstrasse 18 in the Tiergarten, Berlin.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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12071. Immigrant identification card issued to the German Jewish refugee child, Hilde Anker, upon her arrival in Boston in October 1940.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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12072. Children's identification card issued to eight-year-old Hilde Anker in December 1934, that was used in lieu of a passport when she travelled to England on a Kindertransport in 1939.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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12073. Simon Anker (front row, second from the left) poses with his five sons in Zoppot, a suburb of Danzig.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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12074. View of the Ankerhaus (left), a building owned by Simon Anker on the Hopfengasse in Danzig, that he donated to the Bar Kochba sports club.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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12075. Jacob (Yankel) Verbovski (far right), a representative of the Altestenrat labor office, talks with a group of Jews near the Varniu Street entrance to the Kovno ghetto.
other illegal goods into the ghetto. Verbovski survived the war and immigrated to the United States.