Displaying: 12,326 12,350 of 19,651 matches for “survive”
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12326. Passengers sit by a table in the dining room of the refugee ship MS St.
France and the Netherlands died at the hands of the Nazis, but the majority survived the war.
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12327. Patients sit in bunk beds in the Kovno ghetto hospital.
delousing in the ghetto's bathhouse. Because the survival of the ghetto depended on the community's ability
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12328. A sick child sits in a crib in the Kovno ghetto hospital, covered by a blanket with a Star of David.
delousing in the ghetto's bathhouse. Because the survival of the ghetto depended on the community's ability
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12329. A mother cradles her new born baby in the Kovno ghetto hospital.
delousing in the ghetto's bathhouse. Because the survival of the ghetto depended on the community's ability
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12330. Children working in an ORT carpentry workshop in the Kovno ghetto.
school, Jacob Olieski, survived the war, immigrated to Israel and headed the network of ORT schools there.
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12331. A boy works at a machine in a Kovno ghetto workshop.
school, Jacob Olieski, survived the war, immigrated to Israel and headed the network of ORT schools there.
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12332. A group of children stand with a woman outside the Hotel de France in Loudun.
also were passengers on the St. Louis. They survived the war and only managed to enter the United
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12333. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with the daughter of their rescuers, Lydia van Buggenhout outside the van Buggenhout farmhouse in Rumst, Belgium.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12334. Annette and Margo Lederman pose with an allied soldier in front of the cafe owned by Edouard van Buggenhout.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12335. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout, outside the cafe owned by the van Buggenhouts.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12336. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with the daughter of their rescuers, Lydia van Buggenhout, and an allied soldier in Rumst, Belgium.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12337. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with one of the sons of their rescuers on a street in Rumst, Belgium.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12338. Rajala Lederman walks along a street in Brussels with her daughter Annette.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12339. Margo and Annette Lederman pose with dolls given to them by their rescuers, Clementine and Edouard van Buggenhout.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12340. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout near the van Buggenhout home.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12341. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, walk along a street in Rumst, Belgium with their rescuer, Clementine van Buggenhout.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12342. Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, pose in a tree on the farm of the van Buggenhout family.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12343. Formal portrait of Annette and Margo Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, taken in the home of the van Buggenhout family.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12344. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, walk along a street in Rumst, Belgium with their rescuers, Clementine and Lydia Buggenhout.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12345. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, play in the yard of the van Buggenhout home in Rumst, Belgium.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12346. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children in hiding, sit on the lap of one of the van Buggenhout boys on the farm in Rumst, Belgium.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12347. Margo and Annette Lederman, two Jewish children who lived in hiding with the van Buggenhout family during the war, pose with Clementine van Buggenhout, during a visit to her home after their removal to a Jewish orphanage.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12348. View of the van Buggenhout family home located at Mechelseoteenweg 82 in Rumst, where Margo and Annette Lederman lived in hiding during the war.
that the girls' sole surviving uncle could not care for them, they were sent to a series of three
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12349. A German officer looks on as the wife of a hanged man kisses her husband's hand.
Poland. Gronefeld survived the war and immediately afterward took up his camera to photograph the
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12350. Poster advertising Gustav Mikulai's all-female orchestra.
and the family were released and survived the war. Widely known in Budapest for his orchestra and