Displaying: 426 450 of 1,022 matches for “Holocaust Encyclopedia: Warsaw”
-
426. Hannah Rosenblat
also from Zvolen. After living in Warsaw for several years, Hannah and Jozef settled in the industrial
-
427. Elya Rosenblat
Warsaw. After completing school in Radom, Elya apprenticed to become a women's tailor. Eventually, he
-
428. German soldiers parade in Pilsudski Square
German soldiers parade in Pilsudski Square. Warsaw, Poland
-
429. Regina visits the birthplace of Frederick Chopin
Regina at Zelazowa Wola (near Warsaw), the birthplace of
-
430. Jewish partisans at a camp in the forest
Jewish partisans, survivors of the Warsaw ghetto uprising, at a
-
431. Stephen S. Wise with Ignacy Schiper
left), a Polish Zionist. Warsaw, Poland, 1936.
-
432. Cover of an underground Yiddish newspaper
the bottom of the cover reads: "Fascism must be smashed." Warsaw ghetto, Poland, January
-
433. SS and Police Leader Juergen Stroop interrogates two captured Jews
SS and Police Leader Juergen Stroop interrogates two Jews arrested during the Warsaw ghetto
-
434. False identification card used by Vladka Meed
False identification card which Vladka Meed had used from 1940–42 on the Aryan side of Warsaw
-
435. Postcard sent to Ruth Segal (back)
sent the postcard from Warsaw, in German-occupied Poland, on June 20, 1941. [From the USHMM special
-
436. Hieronim Sabala, a member of the Polish resistance
underground scouts of the Polish resistance movement). Warsaw, Poland, 1939.
-
437. Members of a Zionist youth movement
Mordechai Anielewicz. Seated in front are Moshe Domb and Rachel Zilberberg ("Sarenka"). Warsaw, Poland, 1938.
-
438. The Margules children wearing Jewish badges
The Margules children wearing Jewish badges. Originally from Warsaw, the Margules family settled
-
439. Three participants in the Treblinka uprising
survived the war. Photograph taken in Warsaw
-
440. Female Soldiers of the Polish Home Army
October 1944 as a result of the Warsaw Polish uprising. After the uprising
-
441. Victim of a German air raid
in a field in Warsaw, Poland, during a German air raid. Photographed by
-
442. Janusz Korczak poses with children and staff in his orphanage
pose with children and younger staff in Korczak's orphanage in Warsaw
-
443. Portrait by refugee artist Yonia Fain
Shanghai, was the son of Bernard Goldstein, who was active in the Bundist underground of the Warsaw ghetto
-
444. Władysław Bartoszewski discusses Żegota
fall of 1940, Władysław was caught in an arbitrary arrest wave in Warsaw. The Nazi German authorities
-
445. Moishe Menyuk
part of Poland. He supported his family by farming and managing an estate for a Pole from Warsaw
-
446. Chaim Frenkiel
Warsaw called Gabin, where Chaim's father worked as a cap maker. Gabin had one of Poland's oldest
-
447. Jakob Frenkiel
Warsaw called Gabin, where Jakob's father worked as a cap maker. Gabin had one of Poland's oldest
-
448. Laura Ellenbogen
Kazakhstan, Warsaw and a DP camp in Germany before immigrating to the United
-
449. Itzik Rosenblat
apprentice as a women's tailor. After he apprenticed with several tailors in Radom and Warsaw, he went back
-
450. Doris Greenberg describes arrival procedures at Ravensbrück
Warsaw in 1940. After her parents were deported, Doris hid with her sister and other relatives. Doris