Displaying: 201 225 of 281 matches for “Holocaust Encyclopedia: Warsaw”
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201. Sevek Fishman
Sevek's religious Jewish family owned a haberdashery business in Kaluszyn, a suburb of Warsaw ... Warsaw ghetto, and he was married there that same year. After two years, Sevek and his wife
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202. Dorotka Goldstein
the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in Warsaw and worked for a popular newspaper. An avid Zionist, he had ... traveled to Palestine. 1933-39: Dorotka's father established a soup kitchen in Warsaw for Jewish
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203. Raizel Kisielnicki
the small, predominantly Jewish town of Kaluszyn, which was 35 miles east of Warsaw. By the 1930s ... business, as many truck drivers stop here for a quick meal on their way into Warsaw. Her mother-in-law
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204. Abram Kisielnicki
Jewish town of Kaluszyn, 35 miles east of Warsaw. Abram's father owned a ... ghetto and to make sure that everyone respected the curfew hours. Abram escaped to Warsaw in late
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205. Frederick Fleszar
while Frederick was interned, his brother helped him contact the U.S. embassy in Warsaw. Before proof of ... irreparable hearing damage. After his release, Frederick opened a medical practice in Warsaw. He moved back to
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206. Jocheved Kuzda Kasher
and sister tried to get to Warsaw, hoping that it would be safer than Lodz. But Warsaw was also being
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207. Szlamach Radoszynski
's father was a peddler, and the Radoszynski family lived in a modest apartment in Warsaw's Praga section on ... Warsaw surrendered. 1940-44: In November 1940 the Nazis established a ghetto. By April 1943
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208. Oneg Shabbat archive
The Oneg Shabbat underground archive was the secret archive of the Warsaw ghetto.
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209. Abraham Lewent's prisoner jacket
Abraham Lewent, who had been sent from the Warsaw ghetto to
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210. Stroop Report cover
SS Major General Juergen Stroop, commander of German forces that suppressed the Warsaw ghetto
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211. Backpack belonging to Ruth Berkowitz
This tan backpack was used by Ruth Berkowitz to carry her belongings as she fled from Warsaw via
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212. Szlamach Radoszynski: Maps
following year, Szlamach and the rest of the Jews of Warsaw were forced into a ghetto. After the ghetto
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213. Rescue and Resistance
Holocaust despite the inhumane conditions created by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Read about people who ... revolted against Nazi oppression in the Warsaw ghetto and in killing centers.
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214. Elzbieta Lusthaus
escaped to Milanowek, a town near Warsaw. There they lived with a Polish family. Four-year-old Elzbieta ... the destruction of the Warsaw ghetto, German authorities intensified
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215. Pants belonging to Marjan Glass
Pants worn by Marjan Glass as he dug anti-tank ditches for the defense of Warsaw, Poland, and
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216. Death Penalty for Aiding Jews
death to anyone aiding Jews who fled the Warsaw ghetto ... time, they are in the Warsaw District. I remind you that according to the Third Decree of the ... etc. I ask the population of the Warsaw Destrict to immediately report any Jew who resides ... and Police Leader in the Warsaw District Warsaw, September 5, 1942
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217. Operation Reinhard
originated mainly from central Poland, primarily from the Warsaw ghetto, but also from the Districts Radom
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218. Operation Harvest Festival
centers and the Warsaw, Bialystok, and ... ,” the largest German-perpetrated massacre of the Holocaust.
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219. Postcard sent to Ruth Segal (front)
Japan. Family and friends in German-occupied Warsaw, Poland, sent the postcard on June 20, 1941. It ... bears stamps both from the Jewish council (Judenrat) in the Warsaw ghetto and from German censors. [From
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220. Milk can that held part of the Oneg Shabbat archive
and buried in the Warsaw ghetto. The milk cans are currently in the possession of the Jewish ... Historical Institute in Warsaw.
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221. Metal box that held contents of the Oneg Shabbat archive
Oneg Shabbat archive were hidden and buried in the Warsaw ghetto. The ... boxes are currently in the possession of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw. This view is of an
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222. Rozia Grynbaum
from Radom, a large town some 60 miles south of Warsaw. The couple settled in Starachowice, and they
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223. Feliks Bruks
the border, he fell back with the Polish army towards Warsaw to fight the Wehrmacht. In late September
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224. Wladyslaw Piotrowski
located in a rural area north of Warsaw. Wladyslaw married in 1918 and he and his wife, Marie, raised four
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225. Sabina Szwarc
Warsaw. Her family lived in a non-Jewish neighborhood. Her father was a businessman and her mother was a