Displaying: 17,876 17,900 of 19,651 matches for “survive”
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17876. Drypoint etching by Lea Grundig of a frightened crowd watching storm clouds
Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945. Of the nearly 150 prints she created in Germany, 114 survived the war
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17877. Drypoint etching by Lea Grundig of a group of people hiding their faces
Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945. Of the nearly 150 prints she created in Germany, 114 survived the war
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17878. Drypoint etching by Lea Grundig of people trapped and running in circles
Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945. Of the nearly 150 prints she created in Germany, 114 survived the war
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17879. Drypoint etching by Lea Grundig of dead bodies wrapped around tank tread
Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945. Of the nearly 150 prints she created in Germany, 114 survived the war
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17880. Drypoint etching by Lea Grundig of a man threatened by the hands of unseen people
Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945. Of the nearly 150 prints she created in Germany, 114 survived the war
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17881. Drawing of two skeletal doctors with an imprisoned patient by Nikolaj Pirnat and acquired by John Bolé
propaganda for the partisans. Some of his drawings of camp life are among those works that survive and are
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17882. Drawing of an inmate repairing a shirt by Nikolaj Pirnat and acquired by John Bolé
propaganda for the partisans. Some of his drawings of camp life are among those works that survive and are
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17883. Bernard and Sarah Widman papers
whistling a secret whistle to find each other. Of the large group, only about 20 people survived. Circa July
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17884. Oral history interview with Rudolf Bunzel and Eva Reich Bunzel
Guralek [?], who survived and ended up marrying Murmelstein's secretary; how positions in the Jewish
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17885. Oral history interview with Avrum Bichler
the importance of stealing to survive; his father becoming a master builder and being able to improve
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17886. Oral history interview with Dr. Kaja Finkler
surviving a death march; learning via her grandfather that her mother was alive and back in Poland
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17887. Robert Kaldeck papers
travelled with, friends, his wife Dorothy Levine, his sister Edith who survived the Holocaust in England
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17888. Eisenberg and Birnbaum families papers
Auschwitz. Rozsi and her two children survived the war, but Andor died in a camp in the closing days of the
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17889. Clara Renee Keren Vromen papers
immigrated to Israel in 1952. Both of Minnie’s parents were briefly imprisoned in Westerbork, but survived
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17890. Unused yellow triangle concentration camp patch with a U found by a US military aid worker
approximately 15,000 surviving prisoners, all men and boys, who were dying at a rate of 300 persons a day
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17891. Man in a 3-button suit, drawn to illustrate pattern
Conditions were very harsh, but Ilie’s family survived the war. With the assistance of the American Joint
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17892. Coat design, Dresden, created by a German Jewish man and saved by his wife in hiding
wealthy clients. They both survived the war, and in 1949, they immigrated to the United States. Gertrud
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17893. Coat design, Jaffa/ Ilse, created by a German Jewish man and saved by his wife in hiding
wealthy clients. They both survived the war, and in 1949, they immigrated to the United States. Gertrud
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17894. Prayer book
synagogue and shot. Of the family members who stayed on Europe, only one cousin survived. Ruth married
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17895. Prayer book
synagogue and shot. Of the family members who stayed on Europe, only one cousin survived. Ruth married
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17896. WWI Red Cross merit medal, 3rd class awarded to German Jewish woman
and starvation was common. Hildegard and Moritz survived by receiving food parcels from Sweden and
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17897. Engraved gold wedding band that belonged to a German Jewish refugee
refuge in Sweden and survived the war there.
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17898. Engraved gold wedding band that belonged to a German Jewish refugee
refuge in Sweden and survived the war there.
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17899. Przodownikom Pracy [Socialist Hero of Labor] lapel medal issued to a Jewish official postwar
living. Kalman married Pauline Pajes in 1949. She had survived the war in hiding in Grodno. Her family
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17900. Selected records of the World ORT Archive (WOA), London
schools in several eastern European ghettos, teaching skills that were necessary for survival. ORT was