Displaying: 126 150 of 692 matches for “westerbork archive photos”
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126. Document decorated with different shields and flags commemorates the liberation of Enschede by British and Canadian forces on April 1, 1945.
policemen came to their house to deport them to the Westerbork internment camp. However, an employee of the ... loved ones who had been sent to work camps in Germany had been killed. He was sent to Westerbork for a
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127. Portrait of the van Heek family, the rescuers of Isidoor and Clara van Dam.
policemen came to their house to deport them to the Westerbork internment camp. However, an employee of the ... loved ones who had been sent to work camps in Germany had been killed. He was sent to Westerbork for a
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128. Survivors rest on an embankment next to a stopped train.
Source: National Archives and Records Administration, College Park ... Dutch resistance, was frequently held in Nazi custody, deported to Westerbork circa October 1943, and
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129. Passport issued to Ernst Perl in February, 1939. It is stamped with a red "J" and includes the middle name Israel in order to identify the owner as Jewish.
to The Netherlands, but were rounded-up and deported to Westerbork and then Auschwitz. Max perished
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130. Passport issued to Ernst Perl in February, 1939. It is stamped with a red "J" and includes the middle name Israel in order to identify the owner as Jewish.
to The Netherlands, but were rounded-up and deported to Westerbork and then Auschwitz. Max perished
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131. Passport issued to Ernst Perl in February, 1939. It is stamped with a red "J" and includes the middle name Israel in order to identify the owner as Jewish.
to The Netherlands, but were rounded-up and deported to Westerbork and then Auschwitz. Max perished
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132. Passport issued to Ernst Perl in February, 1939. It is stamped with a red "J" and includes the middle name Israel in order to identify the owner as Jewish.
to The Netherlands, but were rounded-up and deported to Westerbork and then Auschwitz. Max perished
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133. Portrait of Leon Woustra. Leon and his wife Lea (Wijnberg) Woustra (the aunt of Selma Wijnberg) perished during the war.
camp. Three months later she was sent to Westerbork, where she remained for one week before her
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134. A prayer in both Hebrew and Dutch to be recited on Sabbath and holidays in memory of the victims of Kristallnacht.
Bertha and her parents were sent to Westerbork. On May 25, 1943 they were deported to Sobibor where they
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135. Identification card of Tiny Van Ommen.
transport to the Westerbork transit camp. Marion's mother Tiny had a connection to one of the guards, Mr
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136. Tiny Van Ommen's ID card.
transport to the Westerbork transit camp. Marion's mother Tiny had a connection to one of the guards, Mr
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137. Class photograph of younger children in the Jewish school in Amsterdam.
INVASION & OCCUPATION -- The Netherlands -- JEWS -- Schools/Class Photos ... The Jewish internees, including the Kisch family were sent to Westerbork. In Westerbork the ... The Kisch family remained in Westerbork for a year. The boys attended school of sorts. When their ... September 13, 1944 on the last transport leaving Westerbork. In Terezin the boys lived together with their
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138. Young children attend a Hanukkah celebration in the Jewish school in Amsterdam.
INVASION & OCCUPATION -- The Netherlands -- JEWS -- Schools/Class Photos ... neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in
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139. Students in a classroom in Utrecht, including a handful of Jewish students.
INVASION & OCCUPATION -- The Netherlands -- JEWS -- Schools/Class Photos ... were brought the Jewish theater, and on June 5, 1943 they were sent to Westerbork. There they were
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140. Hana Kisch writes at his desk.
The Jewish internees, including the Kisch family were sent to Westerbork. In Westerbork the ... The Kisch family remained in Westerbork for a year. The boys attended school of sorts. When their ... September 13, 1944 on the last transport leaving Westerbork. In Terezin the boys lived together with their
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141. Studio portrait of three sisters on a pretend boat in Scheveningen, Holland.
neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in ... had met originally in Westerbork, and they settled in Montreal in 1951. Their mother settled in South
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142. Composite photograph of the donor, Marta Van Collem.
neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in ... had met originally in Westerbork, and they settled in Montreal in 1951. Their mother settled in South
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143. Four-year-old Marta van Collem poses with a stuffed animal.
neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in ... had met originally in Westerbork, and they settled in Montreal in 1951. Their mother settled in South
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144. Studio portrait of Marta van Collem shortly after her liberation from the "Lost Train." Her hair had not yet grown back.
neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in ... had met originally in Westerbork, and they settled in Montreal in 1951. Their mother settled in South
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145. Close-up portrait of three generations of Jewish women in The Netherlands.
neighborhood, the family was arrested and sent to Westerbork. Upon arriving in the camp, men and women were ... them to remain in Westerbork longer. However, in January 1944 the family was given a choice to leave ... They left by passenger train on the second transport to Belsen from Westerbork. The train stopped in ... had met originally in Westerbork, and they settled in Montreal in 1951. Their mother settled in South
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146. Peter Metzelaar draws at a table while hiding on a farm in the Netherlands.
Westerbork transit camp. From there he was sent to Auschwitz where he perished. With the help of the Dutch
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147. Peter Metzelaar sits at a kitchen table on a farm where he was hiding in the Netherlands.
Westerbork transit camp. From there he was sent to Auschwitz where he perished. With the help of the Dutch
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148. Workers pose outside the store where they work in Amsterdam.
with relatives of their father, the Seubring family, on a farm in Westerbork. Hymen's son Bertil
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149. Group portrait of a Jewish family and friends celebrating a wedding.
together Deborah, her mother and two sisters were sent to Westerbork, Ravensbrueck and Belsen, where they
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150. Margreet Dotsch and her sister Deborah play in the sand with toy pails and shovels.
together Deborah, her mother and two sisters were sent to Westerbork, Ravensbrueck and Belsen, where they