Displaying: 9,301 9,325 of 19,649 matches for “survive”
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9301. Bert Bochove with his first wife, Annie, and their children, Eric and Marise.
by the Buchoves survived the war. Annie Buchove died of tuberculosis in 1949, and four years later
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9302. Friends pose on a balcony built by Bert Bochove, adjacent to the attic where he hid 37 Jews.
by the Buchoves survived the war. Annie Buchove died of tuberculosis in 1949, and four years later
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9303. Jewish women working on an agricultural plot in the Kovno ghetto.
provided only one-third the necessary calories for survival. The meat, which was usually horse-meat, was
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9304. View of the home of Dutch rescuer Bert Bochove before the balcony was added.
by the Buchoves survived the war. Annie Buchove died of tuberculosis in 1949, and four years later
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9305. Identity card of Bertha (Wolffberg) Gottschalk, probably used to collect mail at the post office.
her conversion, Kaethe was eventually deported to Theresienstadt as well. She survived. Gertrud and
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9306. A debris filled street in the Warsaw ghetto, photographed during the suppression of the uprising by the SS.
spared. Some of these Jews, who were later evacuated toward the west, survived the war.
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9307. Male attendants at the wedding of Herman de Leeuw and Annie Pais sit in a pew of the Sephardic synagogue in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9308. Samuel Schrijver and his fiance, Jetty de Leeuw, pose on a street in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9309. Two sisters, Jetty and Shelly de Leeuw, pose on the street wearing Jewish badges in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9310. Samuel Schryver poses beneath a sign indicating the entrance to the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9311. An identification document issued to Samuel Schrijver while he was working as an orderly at the Jewish hospital in Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9312. An identification document issued to Samuel Schrijver while he was working as an orderly at the Jewish hospital in Amsterdam.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9313. Portrait of Jetty de Leeuw, the fiance of Samuel Schrijver, shortly before she was deported and killed.
launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After
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9314. Father Bruno poses with five Jewish children he is sheltering.
searched for surviving parents to collect the children under his care. In 1964 Father Bruno was recognized
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9315. Group portrait of four Jewish boys who are being sheltered by Father Bruno.
searched for surviving parents to collect the children under his care. In 1964 Father Bruno was recognized
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9316. Two women collect potatoes on an agricultural plot in the Kovno ghetto.
provided only one-third the necessary calories for survival. The meat, which was usually horse-meat, was
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9317. A Jew uses a crude horse-drawn plow to prepare an agricultural plot in the Kovno ghetto.
provided only one-third the necessary calories for survival. The meat, which was usually horse-meat, was
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9318. A Jew wearing a yoke across his shoulders carries two pails of water to an agricultural plot in the Kovno ghetto.
provided only one-third the necessary calories for survival. The meat, which was usually horse-meat, was
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9319. Andree Geulen Herscovici walking in the street in Brussels.
their families. She married a Jewish man in 1948 who had survived the war in Switzerland with his
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9320. Hannah Szenes in the garden of her home in Budapest.
fellow parachutist, Reuven Dafni, shortly before her capture. Hannah was survived by her mother, who
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9321. Portrait of Nanny (Gottschalk) Lewin in Berlin shortly before her deportation to Theresienstadt.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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9322. Portrait of Lydia (Wolffberg) Ellgass outside her apartment located on Klopstockstrasse 18 in Berlin.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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9323. Three Jewish sisters sledding in the Berlin Tiergarten.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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9324. Studio portrait of Hilde Anker.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters
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9325. Group portrait of members of the extended Anker family at a reunion in Lidzbark Warminski, Poland.
deported to Theresienstadt in 1944. She survived the war. Gertrud and Georg sent their three daughters