Displaying: 18,351 18,375 of 19,005 matches for “survive”
-
18351. Plastic doll named Zsuzsi carried by a young Hungarian Jewish girl on the Kasztner train
career. They learned that Bela’s brother Sandor had survived the Hungarian Labor Service and emigrated to
-
18352. Notebook containing Maud Michal Beer's drawings of the children's block in Theresienstadt
they were murdered. Pavel survived both camps. Maud and Shimon settled on a farm and had three children
-
18353. Stars and stripes dress worn by a German Jewish woman for a DP camp theatrical performance
until the end of the war. Margret later found that the twins had been taken to another camp and survived
-
18354. Brassiere made for a German Jewish woman in a forced labor camp
until the end of the war. Margret later found that the twins had been taken to another camp and survived
-
18355. Star of David pendant and chain worn by a German Jewish woman
until the end of the war. Margret later found that the twins had been taken to another camp and survived
-
18356. Pink embroidered dress made from flour sacks in Athens after liberation
Cross to let him know that their family had survived. Upon his return to Greece, Salomon met Dora, and
-
18357. Moustache brush owned by a German Jewish refugee
The Heppners feared that Irene’s father, Jakob, would not survive the perilous journey, and were
-
18358. Tefillin bag
Werner. Egon’s parents had survived the war in hiding in Berlin. In 1947, they arrived in the US and
-
18359. ORT shoulder badge owned by the Director, ORT vocational schools, DP camps
schools in several eastern European ghettos, teaching skills that were necessary for survival. ORT was
-
18360. Gold ring taken by a Jewish youth when he escaped Treblinka death camp
After the war's end in May 1945, he and Asher, the only surviving members of their family, decided to
-
18361. Model Stuka airplane made by liberated concentration camp inmate and given to US military aid worker
approximately 15,000 surviving prisoners, all men and boys, who were dying at a rate of 300 persons a day
-
18362. Glass bowl etched ORT presented to Director, ORT schools, DP camps
schools in several eastern European ghettos, teaching skills that were necessary for survival. ORT was
-
18363. Charles Phillip Sharp collection
the maternity unit. About twenty babies were born in those first five weeks, but few survived. Philip
-
18364. Anne Ranasinghe papers
surrounding areas, and Anne survived the bombing of a theater in East Grinstead. In 1942, as part of her war
-
18365. Trudy Katzer papers
and Trudy stayed with her Uncle Werner and Grandfather Levi Katz, both of whom survived their
-
18366. Eve Przemyski papers
-1999). Richard had also fought in the Warsaw Uprising, survived the Luckenwalde POW camp (Stalag III-A
-
18367. Drimmer and Gruber families papers
Virginia. In 1963, Irena and her husband, Manes Wysoki, who survived the Holocaust in the Soviet Union
-
18368. Brown enamel mug used by a Polish Jewish concentration camp prisoner
This was difficult work, and Erich knew he would not survive long. Erich’s kapo introduced him to one
-
18369. Dina Pickholz Ostrower photographs
Poland. He had survived under an assumed identity in Poland and then the Soviet Union. In 1948, as the
-
18370. Schultz and Bodnar families papers
György was sent to a forced-labor camp in 1943 but survived the war. Oszkár’s brothers Feri and Lajos and
-
18371. Paint roller and stencil used by Jehovah's Witness labor camp inmate
their Jehovah’s Witness congregation survived the war; over a dozen were executed. In October 1945
-
18372. Handmade wooden checkers set presented to Director, ORT schools, DP camps
schools in several eastern European ghettos, teaching skills that were necessary for survival. ORT was
-
18373. ORT stickpin presented to Director, ORT vocational schools, DP camps
schools in several eastern European ghettos, teaching skills that were necessary for survival. ORT was
-
18374. Relocation of displaced persons
September 1939. Mendel was 14. Mendel survived the war in ghettos and camps; including Plaszow, then
-
18375. Eichmann Trial -- Session 26 -- Testimony about children and the Polish underground
and ate bread when they could. She describes a book written on toilet paper that managed to survive