Displaying: 5,101 5,125 of 19,005 matches for “survive”
-
5101. Members of the Kwar family pose outside on a lawn chair.
did not survive, she should contact the American relatives after the war ended. Roza left the ghetto ... registered with the Jewish committee under her real name in the hope of making contact with any surviving
-
5102. STILL PHOTOGRAPH FROM THE NAZI PROPAGANDA FILM, "Der Fuehrer Schenkt den Juden eine Stadt" [The Fuehrer gives the Jews a City].
been the conductor of the Prague Radio symphony. He survived the war and became the conductor of the ... Only a portion of the original film survived. [Source: Zdenek Lederer, "Terezin," in "The Jews of
-
5103. STILL PHOTOGRAPH FROM THE NAZI PROPAGANDA FILM, "Der Fuehrer Schenkt den Juden eine Stadt" [The Fuehrer gives the Jews a City].
been the conductor of the Radiojournal Orchestra for Czechoslovak Radio. He survived the war and ... Only a portion of the original film survived. [Source: Zdenek Lederer, "Terezin," in "The Jews of
-
5104. A press photo of the Ovici family of dwarf musicians, which they brought with them to Auschwitz and gave to a guard upon their arrival.
largest family to enter Auschwitz and to survive intact -- twelve members ranging from a 15-month old baby ... of the siblings to survive Auschwitz. After the liberation of the concentration camp in January 1945
-
5105. What conditions, ideologies, and ideas made the Holocaust possible?
civilians seen as threats to this quest for long-term survival and domination. World War II ... World War II and German military successes. The war, which Hitler declared was for the survival of the
-
5106. Franz Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested by the Gestapo in May 1936 and remained a prisoner until 30 May 1945.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5107. Hilda Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested in March 1936 and was a prisoner until 1945.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5108. Karl-Heinz Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested by the Gestapo in July 1940 and imprisoned in Sachsenhausen and Dachau until his release in June 1945.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5109. Waltraud Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested several times for refusing to give the "Hitler Greeting".
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5110. Wolfgang Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who was arrested and executed for refusing to serve in the German military.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5111. Hildegard Kusserow, a Jehovah's Witness who spent four years and six months in concentration camps for her faith, including Paderborn, Vechta, and Ravensbrueck.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5112. Jewish deportees from the Hanau, Gelnhausen, and Schluechtern districts board the deportation train at the Hanau station.
elderly women survived until liberation. The last deportation from the Hanau and Schluechtern districts ... Frankfurt Ostbahnhof to Theresienstadt, arriving on February 18. All of them survived until the liberation
-
5113. Residents of the ghetto move to new housing after the Germans reduced the borders of the Kovno ghetto.
On July 10, 1941 German and Lithuanian authorities ordered the surviving 29,761Jews of Kovno to ... move On July 10, 1941 German and Lithuanian authorities ordered the surviving 29,761Jews of Kovno to
-
5114. Jewish men from Kozienice at forced labor digging a drainage channel.
two who stood any chance of surviving. Unfortunately they were caught, and Lewek was taken to the ... Ruchl and his brother Jakub, both of whom had survived the Skarzysko Kamienna camp. In 1946 they left
-
5115. Members of the extended Szabason family pose on a bench in a park in Kozienice.
two who stood any chance of surviving. Unfortunately they were caught, and Lewek was taken to the ... Ruchl and his brother Jakub, both of whom had survived the Skarzysko Kamienna camp. In 1946 they left
-
5116. Three young Jewish women walk along a street in Radom.
two who stood any chance of surviving. Unfortunately they were caught, and Lewek was taken to the ... Ruchl and his brother Jakub, both of whom had survived the Skarzysko Kamienna camp. In 1946 they left
-
5117. Members of the Wijnberg family sit on the roof of their apartment house during the period in which they were prohibited by Nazi decree from going out into the garden.
Abraham married and moved to Utrecht, where his family survived the war in hiding. In August 1942, Selma ... They were among the few who survived until the liberation. For the first two weeks after their escape
-
5118. A newlywed Jewish couple, Mauritz Wijnberg and Betje Jakobs, emerge from a building on their wedding day wearing Jewish badges.
Abraham married and moved to Utrecht, where his family survived the war in hiding. In August 1942, Selma ... They were among the few who survived until the liberation. For the first two weeks after their escape
-
5119. Students of the Jewish school on the Jan van Eyckstraat in Amsterdam.
wearing the Jewish badge. Pictured second from the right in the second row is Yoka Verdoner, who survived ... Abraham Verdoner, perished in Auschwitz. Hilde's parents survived in Theresienstadt.
-
5120. Ewa Kupferblum looks out from her crib in the Warsaw ghetto.
brought her back to her father, who had also survived. In addition two of Abram's brothers, Leon and Stach ... also survived. Her mother, Fela Kupferblum, was murdered in Treblinka in 1942. In 2005, Ewa reunited
-
5121. An 18 year old Czech girl testifies about the destruction of Lidice, Czechoslovakia at the RuSHA Trial.
Ravensbrueck concentration camp. 143 of these women survived the war and returned to Lidice. 98 village ... children were placed in "educational institutions," only 16 of whom survived. Following the removal of its
-
5122. Evi Weisz (now Blaikie) in Budapest in 1943.
concentration camp when, figuring she would die anyway, she escaped into the woods. She survived on snow and ... village. However, Evi, Magda, Peter, and Juliska survived the period of turmoil, and returned to Budapest
-
5123. Evi Weisz in Budapest in 1943.
concentration camp when, figuring she would die anyway, she escaped into the woods. She survived on snow and ... village. However, Evi, Magda, Peter, and Juliska survived the period of turmoil, and returned to Budapest
-
5124. The last photo of the entire Kusserow family. Pictured standing from left to right are Siegfried, Karl-Heinz, Wolfgang, Franz, Hilda, Annemarie, Waltraud, Wilhelm, and Hildegard.
7 years and 4 months in prison. His wife Hilda (b. 7/9/1888) survived a death march from ... 1/23/1924) was incarcerated for 4 years and 3 months and survived a death march from Ravensbrueck
-
5125. Studio portrait of a Jewish grandfather holding his grandson.
four of her siblings, Helena, Regina, Julius and Henryk perished. Rochel survived with her, and her ... brother Elias survived hidden in a bunker.