Displaying: 276 300 of 1,016 matches for “Holocaust Encyclopedia%3A Warsaw”
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276. Lublin/Majdanek: Key Dates
,000 Warsaw Jews to Majdanek; it is possible that thousands were killed upon arrival. Summer ... was the largest single-day, single-location massacre during the Holocaust
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277. SS and Nazi Policy
Warsaw—Hitler appointed Himmler Reich Commissar for the Strengthening of German Ethnic Stock
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278. Polish Jewish Refugees in Lithuania, 1939–40
Yitzhak Gitterman, a refugee who had moved the organization's Warsaw office to Vilna. This energetic
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279. Jewish Community of Kalisz: Youth, Culture, Religion
published in 1924, entitled Mayne gezangen (My Songs). Jakobowicz died in the Warsaw ghetto in 1942
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280. Final Solutions: Murderous Racial Hygiene, 1939–1945
ghettos in Warsaw and other cities came from German public health officials
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281. “Give Me Your Children”: Voices from the Lodz Ghetto
Lodz, Poland’s second largest city after Warsaw. Throughout occupied ... highest regard. While in many ghettos established by Nazi officials, such as the Warsaw ghetto, schools
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282. Theresienstadt: Concentration/Transit Camp for German and Austrian Jews
) the Warsaw ghetto (April 25, 1942) and directly to the Treblinka killing center (September 18
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283. Jewish Aid and Rescue
During the Holocaust, countless Jewish organizations and individuals ... and small groups from Vienna, Berlin, Prague, and Warsaw, among other places. Initially, the Aliyah ... Jewish Agency of Palestine provided substantial aid to Holocaust survivors in displaced persons camps
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284. Einsatzgruppen and other SS and Police Units in the Soviet Union
Leningrad. Its members massacred Jews in Kovno, Riga, and Vilna. Einsatzgruppe B set out from Warsaw in
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285. Coining a Word and Championing a Cause: The Story of Raphael Lemkin
centers and concentration camps, the Warsaw
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286. Mir
the Holocaust: Crimes of the Local Police in Belorussia and Ukraine, 1941–44 (New York: St ... and also an early Rufeisen statement at the Jewish Historical Institute (AYIH) in Warsaw. Contemporary
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287. Flight and Rescue
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2000. Learn more about their stories. War and ... of Warsaw. Throngs are leaving their homes on a ... European yeshiva to survive the Holocaust nearly intact. At war's end in August 1945, this distinction in ... treatment became fully apparent to the refugees as they learned about the Holocaust and mourned the tragic
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288. Franklin Delano Roosevelt
witnessed in the Nazi-established Warsaw ghetto. Roosevelt again did not commit to any specific action other
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289. Gusen
,000 Polish civilians captured in October 1944 during the Warsaw Home Army
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290. Operation Reinhard (Einsatz Reinhard)
Warsaw ghetto. They were also from the Radom and Krakow Districts in the General Government and from
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291. Tattoos and Numbers: The System of Identifying Prisoners at Auschwitz
to Auschwitz after the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 were not tattooed. Some Jewish prisoners who were held
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292. International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg
camps. The Holocaust was not the main focus of the trial, but considerable evidence was presented about ... Warsaw ghetto, and the estimate of six million Jewish victims
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293. Arie Wilner
Arie Wilner, a founder of the Warsaw ghetto's Jewish Fighting Organization (ZOB). He was killed ... in the Warsaw ghetto uprising. Warsaw, Poland, before 1943.
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294. Siege
His ten-minute film Siege records the horror and confusion of Warsaw during the ... Warsaw and the occupation of Poland. During the early stages of the ... fortifications. As the Polish soldiers retreated to the east, German troops encircled and laid siege to Warsaw.
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295. Juergen Stroop
Juergen Stroop (third from left), SS commander who crushed the Warsaw ... ghetto uprising. Warsaw, Poland, between April 19 and May 16, 1943.
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296. Israel Kanal
of the Jewish Fighting Organization (ZOB) in Warsaw. He fought in the ... Warsaw ghetto uprising. Kutno, Poland, ca. 1939.
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297. Playbill
performance featuring Warsaw Jewish actress Raya Zomina, fierce fighting continued in the Warsaw ghetto ... about the Holocaust reached the Jewish refugees in Shanghai, but they did not receive reliable news or
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298. Zivia Lubetkin
Warsaw ghetto uprising. Poland, date uncertain.
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299. Abraham Lewent
Warsaw. His grandfather owned a clothing factory and retail store, which his father managed. Abraham ... 's family lived in a Jewish section of Warsaw and he attended a Jewish school. Warsaw's Jewish community was ... After the bombardment of Warsaw began on September 8, 1939, Abraham's family had little to eat. The ... Relief came when the capital surrendered. 1940-44: By April 1943 Abraham was in the Warsaw ghetto
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300. Janina Prot
old, her parents divorced; Janina left Warsaw and went to live with her father near the Polish town of ... Radom, while her brother Tomas remained in Warsaw with his mother. Janina, or Jana as she was ... affectionately known, loved to read. 1933-39: When Jana was 12 she moved back to Warsaw to attend ... Warsaw. Thinking it might be safer downtown, they rushed to stay at her aunt's apartment. But on