Displaying: 176 200 of 692 matches for “westerbork archive photos”
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176. Postwar studio portrait of Dutch Jewish siblings Erna and Abbi Stopper with Abbi's rescuers Gerrit and Marie van Dwerf.
was deported, so had spent the rest of the war in a series of camps, including Westerbork, Vught, and ... camps. Erna’s mother and sister Henny had been deported first to Westerbork and then to Bergen Belsen
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177. Portrait of Coenraad Rood and his wife Elisabeth Kooperberg Rood.
deported to Westerbork concentration camp. In all he spent the next three years in 11 different German
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178. Portrait of Elisabeth Kooperberg Rood, a nurse in the Jewish invalid hospital in Amsterdam.
deported to Westerbork concentration camp. In all he spent the next three years in 11 different German
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179. A Dutch policeman crouches inside a small bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
1943 a Dutch informer led Germans to the site. All 23 were arrested and sent to Westerbork. From
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180. A Dutch policeman looks out the hatch of a small bunker that served as a hiding place for Dutch Jews in the Eibergen region in 1942-1943.
1943 a Dutch informer led Germans to the site. All 23 were arrested and sent to Westerbork. From
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181. Prisoners are forced to dig a canal in the Staphorst-Rouveen labor camp.
deported to Westerbork concentration camp. In all he spent the next three years in 11 different German
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182. Prisoners pose on a barge that is in a canal that they are digging in the Staphorst-Rouveen labor camp.
deported to Westerbork concentration camp. In all he spent the next three years in 11 different German
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183. Identification paper issued to Siegfried Abraham in Switzerland following his release from Bergen-Belsen in a prisoner release stating that he had Haitian citizenship.
deported first to Westerbork and then to Bergen-Belsen in 1944. The family was chosen to be part of a
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184. Street portrait of Lisette and Benjamin Soep.
Dutch resistance, was frequently held in Nazi custody, deported to Westerbork circa October 1943, and
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185. Wedding portrait of Lisette and Benjamin Soep.
Dutch resistance, was frequently held in Nazi custody, deported to Westerbork circa October 1943, and
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186. Kurt and Else Stein with their infant son, Werner.
Westerbork. The date of their arrest is unknown, but they remained in Westerbork until September 14, 1943
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187. The newly married couple, Herman de Leeuw and Annie Pais, pose with members of the wedding party shortly after the ceremony.
infamous Oranjehotel. From there, he was deported to Westerbork in February 1944, where he was placed in ... launch an attack on Westerbork and, in the process, kill the surviving Jewish prisoners. After ... Allied troops, who liberated Westerbork on April 12. Schrijver stayed on in Westerbork for several weeks
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188. Robert Coopman rests in his baby carriage.
Amsterdam. From there he was sent to Westerbork. After a few weeks, on September 13, 1944 he was deported ... survived Westerbork and Bergen-Belsen as unaccompanied small children. Mr. van den Broeke had been asked ... Vinselveluis Fiju. She was a nurse and had helped children on the September 13, 1944 transport from Westerbork ... placed looking for Robert. Going through governmental archives they found an address in Naarden where
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189. Portrait of Gitel Münzer in her home in The Hague.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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190. Portrait of Indonesian-Dutch rescuer Mima Saïna.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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191. Group portrait of members of the extended Münzer family in Rymanow, Poland.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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192. Group portrait of Jewish youth in Rymanow, Poland.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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193. Group portrait of an extended Jewish family in Rymanow, Poland.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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194. Group portrait of Jewish youth in Rymanow, Poland.
philosopher, Benedict Spinoza. On January 3, 1943 they were taken to Westerbork, where they remained for only ... concentration camps in Holland were emptied. They were then taken back to Westerbork and placed on a convoy to ... and the Jewish children to the SS. The three were immediately arrested and sent to Westerbork. On
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195. Children work on an outdoor art project in a Jewish summer camp in The Netherlands.
yellow star and began deportations to Westerbork. After Letty discovered that the children were to be ... the others. The next day they were all sent to Westerbork where Letty was sent to the prison of ... sent first to prison in Scheveningen and then on January 27, 1944 she was transferred to Westerbork
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196. Group portrait of four Zionist youth. Letty Rudelsheim is pictured on the bottom left.
yellow star and began deportations to Westerbork. After Letty discovered that the children were to be ... the others. The next day they were all sent to Westerbork where Letty was sent to the prison of ... sent first to prison in Scheveningen and then on January 27, 1944 she was transferred to Westerbork
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197. Group portrait of a Jewish Dutch family. Among those pictured are the sister of Letty Rudelsheim and her two children.
yellow star and began deportations to Westerbork. After Letty discovered that the children were to be ... the others. The next day they were all sent to Westerbork where Letty was sent to the prison of ... sent first to prison in Scheveningen and then on January 27, 1944 she was transferred to Westerbork
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198. Group portrait of a three Jewish Dutch children wearing costumes.
yellow star and began deportations to Westerbork. After Letty discovered that the children were to be ... the others. The next day they were all sent to Westerbork where Letty was sent to the prison of ... sent first to prison in Scheveningen and then on January 27, 1944 she was transferred to Westerbork
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199. Identification card of Marion Kunstenaar's father, Michel Kunstenaar, marked with a J.
transport to the Westerbork transit camp. Marion's mother Tiny had a connection to one of the guards, Mr
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200. False ID card of Michel Kunstenaar, using his real name.
transport to the Westerbork transit camp. Marion's mother Tiny had a connection to one of the guards, Mr