Displaying: 76 100 of 252 matches for “Grodno”
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76. A group of young people pose together for a photograph.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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77. Studio portrait of the Muller family in Lida. Pictured are David and Hegwig Muller, with their daughter Zenia.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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78. Studio portrait of the Muller sisters in Lida. Pictured are Sheyna and Batya Muller.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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79. Studio portrait of a Polish Jewish child and his grandfather.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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80. A first grade class in a Tarbut school in Lida. Among those pictured is Shmuel Muller (seated on the left side, third row from the front, left).
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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81. Group portrait of Noar Hazioni summer camp partipants seated around a table.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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82. Portrait of Noar Zioni youth group members, with children in front.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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83. Portrait of the Hanoar Hazioni Zionist youth group members in Lida.
Lida, [Grodno] Poland
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84. Alisa (Lisa) Nussbaum Derman describes joining the Nekama (Revenge) Jewish partisan unit led by Josef Glazman in the Naroch Forest
ghetto which existed from 1941 to 1942. Lisa eventually escaped from Slonim, and went first to Grodno and
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85. Alisa (Lisa) Nussbaum Derman describes partisan activities
ghetto which existed from 1941 to 1942. Lisa eventually escaped from Slonim, and went first to Grodno and
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86. Alisa (Lisa) Nussbaum Derman describes postwar emigration with the Brihah movement
1942. Lisa eventually escaped from Slonim, and went first to Grodno and then to Vilna, where she joined
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87. Alisa (Lisa) Nussbaum Derman describes a dangerous journey to reach partisan territory in the Naroch Forest, Poland
ghetto which existed from 1941 to 1942. Lisa eventually escaped from Slonim, and went first to Grodno and
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88. Alisa (Lisa) Nussbaum Derman describes going into hiding in June 1942 during roundups in the Slonim ghetto
ghetto which existed from 1941 to 1942. Lisa eventually escaped from Slonim, and went first to Grodno and
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89. Resistance in the Smaller Ghettos of Eastern Europe
Bialystok, Grodno, or Minsk. However, Jews engaged in some form of resistance
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90. Oral history interview with Yahad-In Unum interviewee 312B
Belarusian woman, born in 1924, discusses her experiences in Zhirovichi (Grodno Oblast), Belarus ... 1939; the German occupation of Grodno Oblast; the German administration which had its headquarters in a
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91. GRODNA U GADY VIALIKAI AICHYNNAI VAINY, 1941-1945 : DA 50-GODDZIA VIALIKAI PERAMOGI.
GRODNO.
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92. Partial List of People from the Pruzany Ghetto Who Died at Auschwitz
Pruzany [ghetto] Pruzany Grodno Belarus
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93. Zdziecioł (Zhetel)
center, Gebiet Nowogrodek, Generalkommissariat Weissruthenien Post-1944: Dyatlovo, Grodno
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94. Myron Bassman collection
Correspondence: sent from Sokółka and Dąbrowa near Grodno in Poland by family and friends of Szejna
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95. Mir
Archives in Grodno (AUKGBRBGrO).
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96. Members of the Kremin family gather by the tombstone of Yehuda Menachem Kremin.
Krashunski and Hayyim Yitzhak Kremin. All perished during the Holocaust in Eisiskes, Lida or Grodno.
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97. Deborah Gaynes photographs
Grodno, Poland. The family moved to Vilna after World War I. Most of the members of the family were
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98. Oral history interview with Kim Mordchell
Kim Mordchelll, born September 5, 1924 in Grodno, Poland (Hrodna, Belarus), describes his father ... the Grodno ghetto in January 1943; being deported with his family to Auschwitz concentration camp
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99. Oral history interview with Aron Derman
his escape from a German “Aktion”; his decision to leave the ghetto and travel to Grodno; being sent ... Grodno ghetto and hopping a train headed to Vilna with several friends (including his future wife Lisa
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100. Oral history interview with Nina Kaleska
Nina Kaleska, born on April 11, 1929 in Grodno, Poland (now Hrodna, Belarus), describes having a ... and the formation of two ghettos in Grodno; the Germans selecting one of her cousins, who was