Displaying: 1,801 1,825 of 19,649 matches for “survive”
-
1801. Outlaw under the German boot in France
description of David Kipnis and his wife's experiences in occupied France, and their attempts to survive in
-
1802. Pollack family collection
Sarah and Zelma Mau perished in the Holocaust, while Bette Mau survived the war in Moscow.
-
1803. Ruth Sien memoir
posing as a Gentile, and survival through war, liberation, pogroms, immigration to U.S.
-
1804. The Story of Berta and Freddy Fischel
Typescript, 5 pages, with separate title page, "Surviving: The Story of Berta and Freddy Fischel
-
1805. Max Mermelstein papers
Testimony, typescript, 17 pages, "Surviving the Forest," by Max Mermelstein, translated from
-
1806. Calecka Perla memoir
's deportation to concentration camps, and her survival as a non-Jewish domestic, liberation by the Russians, and
-
1807. Marion Cassirer collection
War II which she survived as a hidden child in the Netherlands.
-
1808. George Pick family collection
during, and immediately after the Holocaust, which they survived by living in hiding in Budapest.
-
1809. Dorit Isaacsohn family collection
in Gratz and Berlin, Germany, which Dorit and Gertrud survived in hiding, and after the Holocaust in
-
1810. Members of the Rosenthal family pose in their garden.
Rozenthal, Sheindel (perished 1942) and Avraham Kleiman (survived).
-
1811. Portrait of Dr. Lazar Javorkovsky, uncle of the donor, wearing his physician's gown.
Javorkovsky survived incarceration in the Riga ghetto, Kaiserwald, Stutthof, Buchenwald and Magedburg
-
1812. Czech-Jewish sisters pose in matching dresses while living as displaced persons in Sweden..
.. Together, sisters Elizabeth (Winkler) Reiss, left, and Sara (Winkler) Spitz, survived Auschwitz and Bergen
-
1813. Group portrait of Jewish youth from Orinin, USSR.
Group portrait of Jewish youth from Orinin, USSR. Among the few of those pictured to survive the
-
1814. Nesha Leist Chamaides escorts her niece Szaindl Dudlesak to her wedding to Moses Goldfarb.
women survived together in hiding in the forest.
-
1815. Elie Wiesel Timeline and World Events: 1928–1951
perish; his two older sisters survive
-
1816. Stanislawow (by Nechama Tec)
survived. Most died fighting to the end. Among these fighters was the commander Anda Luft. With
-
1817. Mosaic of Victims: In Depth
to survive so that their labor could be exploited, Soviet soldiers were generally incarcerated under
-
1818. Third Reich
make decisions that he deemed necessary for the survival of the German race. This extra-legal line of
-
1819. SS: Decline, Disintegration, and Trials
separate peace with the western Allies that would permit the Nazi state to survive and fight on against the
-
1820. Theresienstadt: "Retirement Settlement" for German and Austrian Jews
would facilitate the development of Theresienstadt into a model Jewish city and permit the survival of
-
1821. Political Prisoners
their racial heritage and the ensuing obligations to maintain the survival of the race. The Nazis
-
1822. World War II in Europe
months of fierce fighting and heavy casualties, the surviving German forces, now only about 91
-
1823. 1944: Key Dates
Soviet prisoners of war, and 700 Estonian political prisoners. The SS evacuates most of the surviving
-
1824. Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution
. Only one comprehensive statistical study conducted on behalf of SS chief Heinrich Himmler survived the
-
1825. Polish Refugees in Iran during World War II
camps in the Soviet Union. Many of those who survived were very weak from the conditions in the camps