Displaying: 676 692 of 692 matches for “westerbork archive photos”
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676. Members of the Ledermann family, Jewish refugees from Berlin, pose outside on the terrace of their apartment in Amsterdam.
were taken to Westerbork in June 1943, and in November were deported to their death in Auschwitz. Her ... grandmother had been arrested the previous year and was kept in Westerbork for a long time before being ... remained in Westerbork Barbara was able to send them packages and receive mail. During her years in hiding
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677. Group portrait of Jewish children wearing costumes for the Purim holiday.
were taken to Westerbork in June 1943, and in November were deported to their death in Auschwitz. Her ... grandmother had been arrested the previous year and was kept in Westerbork for a long time before being ... remained in Westerbork Barbara was able to send them packages and receive mail. During her years in hiding ... filled with papers. Among those papers were Anne Frank's journals and photo album. After the police
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678. Jewish youth burn chametz [leavened bread] in preparation for the Passover holiday.
friend Ignaz Kempler, who she knew from home. He survived Westerbork, Auschwitz/Dora, Mauthausen
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679. Fritz, Babette, Renate and Ines Spanier pose on a stairwell on the MS St.
invaded Holland in 1940, the Spaniers were sent to the Westerbork concentration camp where Fritz served as
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680. Tom, Wolf and Michael Stein play with their maternal grandparents in their home in Amsterdam.
the Nazis. Wolf met his parents in the Westerbork transit camp, and all three were deported to Bergen
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681. Doris Bloch (left) with her classmate and friend Gerritje van der Pol.
to their death in Auschwitz in 1944 via Westerbork and Theresienstadt. Shortly after liberation
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682. Doris and Gerda Bloch pose with a lamb and two rabbits on a farm in Thomasdorf, Germany.
to their death in Auschwitz in 1944 via Westerbork and Theresienstadt. Shortly after liberation
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683. Portrait of the Bloch family in front of a house in Zandvoort.
to their death in Auschwitz in 1944 via Westerbork and Theresienstadt. Shortly after liberation
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684. Doris Bloch and her cousin Annelise Hollander play in the sand at the beach.
to their death in Auschwitz in 1944 via Westerbork and Theresienstadt. Shortly after liberation
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685. Portrait of a young Jewish girl, Truusje Schoenfeld, holding a doll.
family. Subsequently, Walther and his father were deported to Theresienstadt via Westerbork, but both
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686. Portrait of Bloeme Emden with her father Emanuel and younger sister Via.
and sent to Westerbork. She was deported to Auschwitz on September 3, 1944, and in October 1944, she
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687. Fritz and Babette Spanier with their twin daughters, Renate and Ines, pose on the steps of the MS St.
St. Louis in front of a sign that says "No admittance." Photo from the personal St. Louis photo ... invaded Holland in 1940, the Spaniers were sent to the Westerbork concentration camp where Fritz served as
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688. Elly van Leewen enjoys a play tea party with her baby sister Chellie.
following year, Isaac volunteered to go to Westerbork. He joined one of the first transports to the camp
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689. A German-Jewish refugee holds her baby girl in her arms on the balcony to her apartment in Amsterdam where her husband and her family had built a new business.
to the Westerbork transit camp. From there on July 15, 1942 they were deported to Auschwitz where
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690. Portrait of Herman with mother Rosa approximately a year before family went into hiding.
of 1946 did he learn that his parents had been sent to Westerbork and Sobibor where they perished on
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691. Eva Tikotin hugs her two young daughters, Johanna and Leentje, prior to their going into hiding.
in hiding places. Leentje first had a photo of her mother with her, but it confiscated as a security ... his doorstep with photos of Japanese art hoping for his expertise in authenticating them. It turned ... had been in Westerbork and Terezin. He is a pediatric nephrologist. Ilana headed the office of the U
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692. Eva and Heinz Geiringer pose with a bicycle on a street in Belgium after fleeing Vienna.
Westerbork. Conditions there were somewhat better and the family could move around freely. However after