Displaying: 17,926 17,950 of 19,651 matches for “survive”
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17926. Autobiographical ink wash drawing by a Polish refugee of 2 men reviewing a military uniform
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17927. Autobiographical ink drawing of 6 refugees trekking through the snow at night
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17928. Photocopy of an autobiographical ink drawing of a uniformed man and his Russian interrogator
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17929. Photocopy of an autobiographical ink drawing of Polish refugees disguised as Greeks crossing the border
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17930. Star of David badge with Jood for Jew worn by a Dutch Jewish woman
survived until the liberation on May 9, 1945. After the release from Westerbork, Inge and Hansje were
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17931. Die Biene Maja [Book]
synagogue and shot. Of the family members who stayed on Europe, only one cousin survived. Ruth married
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17932. Autobiographical ink drawing of a man walking along a traffic filled highway
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17933. Autobiographical ink drawing of an armed man guarding a watertower at night
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17934. Photocopy of an autobiographical ink drawing of 5 refugee men with knapsacks crossing a guarded gangplank
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17935. Autobiographical ink drawing of a passenger transfer at sea between two Ma’apilim ships
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17936. Autobiographical ink and pencil drawing of a sinking passenger filled boat
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17937. Photocopy of an autobiographical ink drawing of 3 adults and a child disembarking at a guarded port
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17938. Autobiographical ink wash drawing of men, women, and children in a detention camp separated by barbed wire
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17939. Autobiographical ink drawing of 2 uniformed men boarding a bus in the countryside
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17940. Autobiographical ink and pencil drawing of a woman on a storefront sidewalk and a man at an outdoor counter
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17941. Photocopy of an autobiographical ink drawing of 3 men sharing a bed as a fourth removes his shoes
searched the ghetto ruins for surviving relatives but found none. Not wanting to return to his Russian army
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17942. Portrait of a young female inmate created in Theresienstadt ghetto
survived. The family was sent to the Deggendorf displaced persons camp in Germany to await immigration to
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17943. Street scene in Shanghai
but Ilie’s family survived the war. With the assistance of the American Joint Distribution Committee
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17944. Makeshift stove in the Wacs' home in Shanghai
Conditions were very harsh, but Ilie’s family survived the war. With the assistance of the American Joint
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17945. Interior of the Wacs' home in Shanghai
Jewish refugees into ghettos. Conditions were very harsh, but Ilie’s family survived the war. With the
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17946. Stamped black plastic dust comb owned by a German Jewish refugee
deported to Shanghai where they survived the war in the Hongkew ghetto. Hanni married a US soldier and
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17947. Black plastic dust comb owned by a German Jewish refugee
deported to Shanghai where they survived the war in the Hongkew ghetto. Hanni married a US soldier and
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17948. Coat design, Basel, 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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17949. Coat design, Mia, 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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17950. Commemorative silver plaque presented to a Hungarian rabbi
caring for her began stealing her food. Ferenc, his wife, and daughter survived the war in hiding and