Displaying: 13,001 13,025 of 19,651 matches for “survive”
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13001. Prewar publicity photograph of rescuer Elena Petrauskas, a well-known stage actress.
had worked as teacher. Danute was born in the Kovno ghetto on October 11, 1941 and survived the
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13002. Haim Solomon poses next to the barbed wire fence surrounding the internment camp in Cyprus.
thousands of Jews dead. Haim's family was among the few that survived intact. His brothers hid in a shed
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13003. Identification photograph of Haim Solomon taken in Iasi where his family resettled after being forced to leave Bivolari.
thousands of Jews dead. Haim's family was among the few that survived intact. His brothers hid in a shed
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13004. Two Viennese Jewish cousins pose together with a bicycle.
During one voyage, he met his future wife, Josiane Aizenberg who had survived the war as a hidden child
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13005. Studio portrait of the Schiller family taken one day before they received a deportation notice.
. Pictured are Viktor, Lili, Frankisek and Gustav Schiller. Their dog survived with their cook in the
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13006. Austrian swimming champion Ruth Langer, models a line of swimwear.
eventually to Nice, where they survived the war in hiding. In 1943 Ruth married Hans Liebermann (now John
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13007. Group portrait of six Jewish men [possibly Jewish refugees in Lithuania].
treasurer of the Yiddish Typographical Union and later the Workmen's Circle. Though Jacob survived, his
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13008. An identity card issued to Simone Werlin (assumed name of Simone Weil) by the Bibliotheque Nationale et Universitaire de Strasbourg.
of her immediate family survived the war in France.
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13009. One of the ten metal boxes in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13010. One of the ten metal boxes in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13011. Three of the ten metal boxes in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13012. Three of the ten metal boxes in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13013. One of the two milk cans in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13014. One of the two milk cans in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13015. One of the two milk cans in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13016. One of the two milk cans in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13017. Close-up of the lid of one of the two milk cans in which portions of the Ringelblum Oneg Shabbat archives were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto.
documents were recovered. Two surviving members of the Oneg Shabbat staff, Rachela Auerbach and Hersz
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13018. Memorial plaque in Hebrew and Romanian for the Jews of Iasi who were killed during the pogrom and evacuation by train from the city in June and July, 1941.
train under similar conditions and sent to Podu Iloaiei, where few survived.
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13019. A five-piece miniature silver tea set given to Elzbieta Lusthaus by her grandmother prior to moving into the Tarnow ghetto.
discovered and sometimes kept her daughter from school or hid her in the basement. They both survived and
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13020. An intermarried German-Jewish couple sits at a table in a park in Stettin, Germany.
the end of the war, but survived.
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13021. Leo Holzer, chief of the Theresienstadt fire brigade, poses next to a fire truck marked Terezin on the hood.
Holzer survived, and after the war worked as a factory manager in several locations in Czechoslovakia
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13022. Group portrait of pupils and teachers in the Christian Sisters of Klimontow convent school in Klimontow, Poland.
Mania, the only grandchild, should any of them survive. Sylka was deported to Treblinka where she was
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13023. Majer Sztajman poses on a cobblestone street in the Opatow ghetto holding his baby daughter, Mania.
Mania, the only grandchild, should any of them survive. Sylka was deported to Treblinka where she was
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13024. Members of the Fefer and Sztajman families at a gathering in the Fefer home in Lublin to celebrate the engagement (Tenayim) of Majer Sztajman and Sylka Fefer.
Mania, the only grandchild, should any of them survive. Sylka was deported to Treblinka where she was
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13025. Jews line up to receive packages at the post office in the Opole Lubelskie ghetto.
Jews were sent to Belzec and Sobibor. Lilli's parents did not survive. During the war Lilli was