Displaying: 9,451 9,475 of 9,814 matches for “Buchenwald”
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9451. Postwar Belgian gazette recording the death of a German Jewish concentration camp prisoner
Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany, and murdered before June 1945. Norbert’s brother, Sally, had made
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9452. Adrienne Friede Krausz papers
The collection consists of Buchenwald scrip, news clippings, documents, and photographs relating to
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9453. Matyas family photograph collection
The collection consists of Buchenwald scrip, news clippings, documents, and photographs relating to
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9454. Kosher cookbook buried by a newlywed couple for safekeeping and recovered after the war
Raymond Kantor from Czestochowa, Poland, who survived the Buchenwald, Hrubieszow, and Tschenstochau
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9455. Matyas family photograph collection
The collection consists of Buchenwald scrip, news clippings, documents, and photographs relating to
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9456. Portrait of a Jewish man in the Bedzin ghetto.
Moniek was sent on a forced march to Buchenwald that lasted six weeks. Soon after his arrival, Moniek
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9457. Josef Lichtenstajn holds a name card intended to help any of his surviving family members locate him at the Kloster Indersdorf DP camp.
Buchenwald. Sometime later, when it became clear that the Americans were coming, camp officials rounded up a
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9458. Tibor Munkacsy holds a name card intended to help any of his surviving family members locate him at the Kloster Indersdorf DP camp.
arrived at Buchenwald many days later on December 25, 1944. Tibor was first placed in a quarantine camp
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9459. Marc Jarblum addresses a crowd of DPs at a demonstration protesting the forced return of the Exodus 1947 passengers to Europe.
transferred to the Buchenwald sub-camp of Langensalza, and from there to Dora-Mittelbau early in 1945. He was
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9460. Portrait of three youths in the Dabrowa ghetto. Pictured from left to right are Bronka Rubinsztajn, Eljezer Geler and Shewa Szeps.
Germany near Fulda. It was named Kibbutz Buchenwald, and there Moniek studied agriculture in preparation
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9461. Group portrait of Jewish youth in the Dabrowa ghetto who are members of the Gordonia Zionist youth movement.
Germany near Fulda. It was named Kibbutz Buchenwald, and there Moniek studied agriculture in preparation
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9462. Ephraim Londner raises clenched fists during his speech at a demonstration protesting the return of the Exodus 1947 passengers to Germany at the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp.
transferred to the Buchenwald sub-camp of Langensalza, and from there to Dora-Mittelbau early in 1945. He was
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9463. An unidentified speaker addresses the crowd at the Bergen Belsen displaced persons camp during a demonstration protesting the return of the Exodus 1947 passengers to Germany.
transferred to the Buchenwald sub-camp of Langensalza, and from there to Dora-Mittelbau early in 1945. He was
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9464. A group of Jewish teenage girls wearing armbands pose on the stairs outside a building in Bedzin.
Kibbutz Buchenwald hachshara in Geringshof. In June 1946 his group left for Palestine from La Spezia
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9465. A postcard sent from the Bedzin ghetto in Kamionka by C.
Moniek was sent on a forced march to Buchenwald that lasted six weeks. Soon after his arrival, Moniek
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9466. A postcard sent from the Bedzin ghetto in Kamionka by C.
Moniek was sent on a forced march to Buchenwald that lasted six weeks. Soon after his arrival, Moniek
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9467. A series of photographs of children at the Baruch Auerbach Jewish orphanage in Berlin that was published in the Jewish newspaper, Juedisches Nachrichtenblatt, on March 10, 1939.
in the liberation of Buchenwald.
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9468. Jewish youth lying on a grassy hilltop in Dabrowa Gornicza, Poland.
Moniek was sent on a forced march to Buchenwald that lasted six weeks. Soon after his arrival, Moniek
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9469. Portrait of three young Jewish women. From left: Pola Rozen (the donor's niece); Ewa Strzegowska and Frania Magierkiewicz.
Moniek was sent on a forced march to Buchenwald that lasted six weeks. Soon after his arrival, Moniek
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9470. Portrait of David and Aaron Jakobowicz wearing Jewish badges in Sosnowiec.
Mataroa. In 1951 Eva married Aaron Jakobowicz, a survivor of Auschwitz and Buchenwald from Sosnowiec
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9471. Four teenage boys wearing Jewish badges in Sosnowiec.
Mataroa. In 1951 Eva married Aaron Jakobowicz, a survivor of Auschwitz and Buchenwald from Sosnowiec
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9472. Pencil portrait
eventually sent to Buchenwald where he died of typhus shorty after liberation in April 1945. His wife Frida
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9473. Holub, Glaser, and Ornstein families papers
Dessau subcamp of Buchenwald on 18 April 1945. Eva’s parents and brother were deported to Auschwitz in
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9474. Leo Haas aquatint of a funeral and a crowd watching an orchestra in Theresienstadt
eventually sent to Buchenwald where he died of typhus shorty after liberation in April 1945. His wife Frida
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9475. Portfolio
eventually sent to Buchenwald where he died of typhus shorty after liberation in April 1945. His wife Frida