Displaying: 4,476 4,500 of 9,594 matches for “warsaw”
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4476. Elliott S. Mandelman collection
Contains correspondence written from family members in the Warsaw Ghetto, Sanok, and Przemyśl
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4477. Rev. Marian Jacek Dabrowski
Marian in Warsaw. He was told that there was no real reason for his arrest, but that as an educated Pole
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4478. Benjamin Frydmacher
part of Warsaw. His Jewish identity was eventually discovered and he was killed.
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4479. Chelmno
he did not survive, "Szlamek" found refuge in the Warsaw ghetto and told of his experiences. The
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4480. Isadore Frenkiel
religious Jewish family, lived in a one-room apartment in a town near Warsaw called Gabin. Like most Jewish
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4481. Sossia Frenkiel
The Frenkiels, a religious Jewish family, lived in a one-room apartment in a town near Warsaw called
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4482. Operation Reinhard (Einsatz Reinhard)
Warsaw ghetto. They were also from the Radom and Krakow Districts in the General Government and from
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4483. Henia Ring
they entered Henia's town. Her family tried to escape to Warsaw but the German forces quickly overtook
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4484. Rozia Grynbaum
from Radom, a large town some 60 miles south of Warsaw. The couple settled in Starachowice, and they
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4485. Feliks Bruks
the border, he fell back with the Polish army towards Warsaw to fight the Wehrmacht. In late September
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4486. Wladyslaw Piotrowski
located in a rural area north of Warsaw. Wladyslaw married in 1918 and he and his wife, Marie, raised four
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4487. Sabina Szwarc
Warsaw. Her family lived in a non-Jewish neighborhood. Her father was a businessman and her mother was a
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4488. Channa Morgensztern
Channa and her husband and five children lived 35 miles east of Warsaw in the small
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4489. Chaim Werzbe
most of the townspeople were closely tied to those of nearby Warsaw and surrounding farming communities
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4490. Danuta Justyna
Warsaw. They were sent off to a concentration camp, but on the way they escaped from the train. A month
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4491. Esther Morgensztern
The fourth of five children, Esther was born to Jewish parents living 35 miles east of Warsaw in
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4492. David Morgensztern
parents living 35 miles east of Warsaw in the small predominantly Jewish town of Kaluszyn. David's mother
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4493. Jozef Rosenblat
After living in Warsaw for several years, Jozef and his wife, Hannah
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4494. Isaac Weiner
from markets as far away as Warsaw, but in 1929, hoping to find new employment, Isaac moved the family
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4495. Isachar Herszenhorn (Irving Horn)
Warsaw. The city was the center of Poland's leather-tanning industry. Isachar's father worked as a
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4496. Masza Tenenbaum
The youngest of three children, Masza was born to Jewish parents living 35 miles east of Warsaw
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4497. Mayer List
Mayer was born into a Jewish family in a village near Warsaw. His family was active there in the
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4498. Rivka Rzondzinski
The mother of six children, Rivka lived 35 miles east of Warsaw in the small predominantly
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4499. Josel Gerszonowicz
Dzialoszyce on September 6, 1939. 1940-44: In 1941 some 5,000 Jews from Krakow, Warsaw and other towns
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4500. Semyon Menyuk
in Warsaw. Of the estimated 200 families living in Komarovo, only five were Jewish. 1933-39