Displaying: 18,051 18,075 of 19,649 matches for “survive”
-
18051. Title page of a Hebrew primer titled "Eden." The title page features images of Ziegenhaim, a spider with a swastika on its back creeping along a barbed wire web, and a ship sailing away.
had survived the war hiding and were preparing to leave for Germany in the hopes of ultimately
-
18052. Inside page of a Hebrew and English primer. The cover illustration depicts a boy seated on a hill gazing at a boat in the distance.
had survived the war hiding and were preparing to leave for Germany in the hopes of ultimately
-
18053. A closeup of the identification photograph adhered to the Lithuanian Safe Conduct Pass issued to Markus Nowogrodzki.
papers. Boruch's sister Szyfra survived in a bunker under the Warsaw ghetto. Mery's sister successfully
-
18054. Verso of the Lithuanian Safe Conduct Pass issued to Markus Nowogrodzki.
papers. Boruch's sister Szyfra survived in a bunker under the Warsaw ghetto. Mery's sister successfully
-
18055. Josef Rosensaft delivers a speech in front of the Bergen-Belsen memorial while DP policeman Nandor Aron stands guard.
1944. While she survived, most of her relatives, including her husband, son, parents and sister
-
18056. Saba Fiszman (left) poses with a friend in front of the Fede (Dov Hos) in the port of La Spezia, before sailing to Haifa.
returning to Poland. Saba hoped to find her brother Julek, who had survived the war in Russia, and then
-
18057. Group portrait of Jewish DPs on the pier in the port of La Spezia, where they await permission to sail to Palestine.
returning to Poland. Saba hoped to find her brother Julek, who had survived the war in Russia, and then
-
18058. Group portrait of members of the Anders Army. Dr.
Group portrait of members of the Anders Army. Dr. Arthur Haber, originally from Krakow, survived
-
18059. Two members of the Anders Army play chess. Dr.
Two members of the Anders Army play chess. Dr. Arthur Haber, originally from Krakow, survived the
-
18060. Photo journalist Ruth Gruber (center with cap) poses with a group of Jewish DPs who have just arrived from Europe.
refugees, Gruber recorded their stories of survival. She also took photographs documenting the voyage and
-
18061. Portrait of Lola (Slomnicki) Gottlieb wearing a Jewish star in the Dabrowa ghetto.
Samuel survived and were reunited after the war. They immigrated to the United States from Germany in
-
18062. Zipporah Katz (Sonenson), one of the shtetl Hebrew librarians, reads a book while lying in a field.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18063. Studio portrait of Avigdor Katz, a young Jewish boy who was the son of Eisiskes photographers Yitzhak Uri and Alte Katz.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18064. Moshe Sonenson poses with his wife and children in a field they once owned.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18065. Moshe and Zipporah Sonenson pose with their children, Yitzhak and Yaffa, on a bridge in the Tetlance Forest.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18066. A Jewish teacher in Eisiskes poses with six kindergarten children dressed in costumes for a dance performance.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18067. Yitzhak Sonenson (front) with three other Jewish partisans with whom he lived in fall 1944.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18068. Board members of the Brenner Zionist Club and Jewish National Fund (Keren Kayemet) in Eisiskes, pose around a table.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18069. Moshe Sonenson holds his daughter Yaffa on the road leading to their summer cottage in Tetlance near Eisiskes.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18070. Yaffa Sonenson (now Eliach) feeds chickens in front of her family's summer home in Tetlance the same day that Germany occupied Eisiskes.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18071. A young Jewish girl poses in the snow between her mother and her aunt.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18072. The Sonenson family walks along a snow-covered street in Eisiskes.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18073. A young Jewish man poses with his girlfriend and her sister during a business trip to Lida.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18074. Zipporah (Katz) Sonenson poses with her younger brother and her two children against a backdrop of a sports car in the photo studio owned by her parents, Yitzhak and Alte Katz in Eisiskes.
original prewar Jewish population of 35,000, the Sonensons were among only 29 who had survived. That fall
-
18075. Portrait of Hadassa Cudzynowski wearing a yellow star in Sosnowiec.
parents. They were murdered, but Lola managed to survive on her own through the last year of the camp