Displaying: 7,801 7,825 of 9,594 matches for “warsaw”
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7801. Polish prewar Catholic film: gathering, ceremony, celebration, speech
Feature Film Studio, Film Archive) in Warsaw, Poland in June 2003.
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7802. Interview of prisoners, Dachau
and father to Lwow. His father later moved to the Warsaw Ghetto and was subsequently gassed at
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7803. War Crimes Trials: film used as evidence in Ministries' Case (#11)
railroad station amid laughs. Sign: "Warsaw." At night, a torch light parade; a large picture of Hitler is
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7804. Pallbearers carrying the the victims of the Kielce pogrom, transport the coffins from trucks to the burial site in the Jewish cemetery.
the Warsaw ghetto uprising, and Chief Rabbi David Kahane to Kielce. Three days after the pogrom the
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7805. Mourners stand behind a row of coffins at an unidentified burial site The location of the photograph has been tentatively identified as the Jewish Cemetery in Kielce, Poland, with buildings on Dzika Street visible in the background.
the Warsaw ghetto uprising, and Chief Rabbi David Kahane to Kielce. Three days after the pogrom the
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7806. Zishe Malah walks down a street in Poland with his wife Miriam and two unidentified children.
Bedzin. Their son Avraham was born in 1937. Sara's family was from Warsaw, where her father owned a
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7807. A Jewish mother holds her young child shortly before they were forced into the Tarnow ghetto.
Genowefa Bandyrowa and their two daughters, Wisia amd Hanka. After the destruction of the Warsaw ghetto
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7808. Rudolf Brosan's membership certificate in the Shanghai Guild of Craftsmen.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7809. IRO certificate attesting to the fact that Alfred Brosan is eligible for displaced person's assistance.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7810. View of the street in Hainbach, Austria where the Brosan family lived.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7811. Employees of Rudolf Brosan's leather workshop in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7812. Invitation to the bar mitzvah of Alfred Brosan in Vienna, Austria.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7813. Alfred and Trudi Brosan sit back-to-back on a bench in the yard of their cottage in Hainbach, Austria.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7814. Rudolf and Ana Brosan (left) have a glass of wine with friends.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7815. View of the Brosan home in Hainbach, Austria.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7816. Jewish refugees socialize in a garden in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7817. Group portrait of Jewish refugees and a Chinese woman inside a home in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7818. Jewish refugees attend a communal seder in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7819. Group portrait of Jewish refugees at the Shanghai airport.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7820. Meeting of the Guild of Craftsmen in Shanghai. Pictured sitting on the right are Alfred, Ana and Rudolf Brosan.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7821. Students and teachers pose outside a hairdressing school in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7822. Group portrait of Jewish refugees at the Shanghai airport.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7823. Jewish refugees attend a communal seder in Shanghai.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7824. Identification papers for Alfred Brosan.
Berlin, then to Warsaw, and then to Moscow, where they boarded the Trans-Siberian railroad to Vladivostok
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7825. Studio portrait of the Pevsner family. Pictured from left to right are: (front row): Yefim, Nonno, Marco, Nora, Khonia and Olya Pevsner.
Sophia had three siblings. Her sister Hela (Neufeld) Mowszowicz perished in the Warsaw ghetto with her