Displaying: 1 25 of 25 matches for “Helen katz katz”
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1. Portrait of the Katz Family
Group portrait of members of the Katz family of Munkacs ... bottom row are Helen (left) and Tereza. Munkacs, 1942–1943.
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2. Group portrait of members of the Katz family in Munkacs.
right) are: Helen and Tereza Katz; top row: Chicha. Isabella; Philip, Jolon (Cipi) and Regina Katz. ... Group portrait of members of the Katz family in Munkacs. Pictured in the bottom row (from left to
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3. Unauthorized Salvadoran citizenship certificate issued to Hermann Katz (b.
wife Helene (nee Rosenfeld) Katz (b. 1896) and their sons Mor (b. 1924), Zoltan (b. 1925) and Israel (b ... requested the certificate. Hermann and Helene Katz perished in the Holocaust as did their son Fulop. Their ... Unauthorized Salvadoran citizenship certificate issued to Hermann Katz (b. 1888 in Radwanc), his
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4. False papers issued to Hilda Krieser in the Pringy children's home, under the name Helene Rambaux.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born
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5. Studio portrait of the extended Koviliak family: From left to right are Josephine Sara Koviliak (first wife of Avraham who perished), Avraham Bernat Koviliak (donor's father), Morris Blotnik and his wife Helen Koviliak Blotnik, Isidor Koviliak, Hanoch Heinrich Koviliak (donor's grandfather) and Shandor Yishaya Koviliak (died at Mauthausen),
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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6. A group of children poses outside on the steps of Pringy, a children's home sponsored by the Swiss Red Cross.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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7. A Jewish family poses for a group portrait in a garden in Antwerp.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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8. Portrait of an orthodox family in Oswiecim. Pictured from left to right are Hirsh, Malka, Yehuda and Moshe Krieser.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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9. Children's drawing of the Pringy children's home.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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10. Hilda Krieser takes a group of children for a walk in the Rivesaltes transit camp.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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11. A French policeman directs a group of women and children in the Rivesaltes transit camp during their departure from the camp.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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12. A list of names submitted by Secours Suisse aid worker, Friedel Reiter, authorizing four children to leave Rivesaltes for the Pringy children's home.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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13. Postcard send from Perla Krieser from a deportation train to her two daughters in the Rivesaltes concentration camp.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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14. Verso of a postcard send from Perla Krieser from a deportation train to her two daughters in the Rivesaltes concentration camp.
Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was ... Hilda Tayar (born Hilda Krieser) is the daughter of Shlomo Krieser and Perla Katz Krieser. She was born ... fifteen children using the false name of Helene Rambaux, and Anny kept her own name. At the end of the
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15. Group portrait of Jewish children celebrating Hannukah in the Institute Ascher in Bex-les-Bains.
. Among those pictured are bottom row: are Front row: Isi Engel, Helen Felsen, Pearl Engel, Seymour ... Gumbel, Nadine Neiger, Freddy Goldfisher, Daniel Mayer, Joseph Katz, Meir Jakubovitz, Renata Malkovicz
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16. Studio portrait of Eva (Hava), Sara and Avraham Bernat Koviliak in Israel, ca.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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17. Eva (Hava) Weiss stands outside [probably in front of her house] in 1941, about three years prior to her deportation to Auschwitz.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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18. Avraham Koviliak (right) and two other men work on a farm.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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19. Eva (Hava) Weiss stands in front of the entrance to a building in the late 1930s.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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20. Thomas (Tomika) Koviliak stands in a yard in 1932.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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21. Thomas (Tomika) Koviliak stands in a yard in 1935.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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22. Studio portrait of Hanoch Heinrich Koviliak with his second wife.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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23. Avraham Bernat Koviliak holds his infant daughter Sara in his arms.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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24. Avraham Bernat Koviliak (center) works with a threshing machine on a farm in the summertime.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham
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25. Eva (Hava) Weiss (left) and her cousin, Yolanda Schwaitz (right) pose in matching dresses.
1906). His sister, Helen (b. 1897) had left for the United States with her husband Morris Blotnik in ... Athlit, they went to the immigration camp of Pardes Katz where they lived for about five years. Avraham