Displaying: 1 10 of 10 matches for “shanghai”
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1. Ernest G. Heppner describes arrival in Shanghai
Shanghai, one of few havens for refugees without visas. His father and sister stayed behind in Germany ... Shanghai. In 1947, he came to the United States with his wife, whom he met and married in Shanghai.
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2. Ernest G. Heppner describes the Shanghai ghetto and its Japanese overseer
Shanghai, one of few havens for refugees without visas. His father and sister stayed behind in Germany ... Shanghai. In 1947, he came to the United States with his wife, whom he met and married in Shanghai.
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3. Moses Zupnik describes facilities for the Mir Yeshiva in Shanghai
of the Mir Yeshiva to move to Shanghai in Japanese-occupied China. They remained in Shanghai
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4. Ernest G. Heppner describes the random nature of receiving passes to enter and exit the Shanghai ghetto area
Shanghai, one of few havens for refugees without visas. His father and sister stayed behind in Germany ... Shanghai. In 1947, he came to the United States with his wife, whom he met and married in Shanghai.
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5. Ernest G. Heppner describes learning about the Holocaust and the fate of his relatives
Shanghai, one of few havens for refugees without visas. His father and sister stayed behind in Germany ... Shanghai. In 1947, he came to the United States with his wife, whom he met and married in Shanghai.
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6. Norbert I. Swislocki describes fleeing from Warsaw with his mother
them to leave for Shanghai in Japanese-occupied China. Norbert and his parents spent the rest of the ... war in Shanghai. In June 1947 the family immigrated to the United States with the aid of Jewish ... American servicemen stationed in Shanghai after the war.
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7. Norbert I. Swislocki describes leaving Warsaw with his mother upon the outbreak of war
them to leave for Shanghai in Japanese-occupied China. Norbert and his parents spent the rest of the ... war in Shanghai. In June 1947 the family immigrated to the United States with the aid of Jewish ... American servicemen stationed in Shanghai after the war.
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8. Gary Bigus describes Berlin during the 1936 Olympics
Shanghai, China. His father died of illness in Shanghai shortly before the war ended. Gary and his mother
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9. Morton Goldberg describes fleeing from Soviet-occupied Poland to Vilna in 1939
required Jewish refugees with only temporary residence permits to relocate to Shanghai in Japanese-occupied ... China. He remained in Shanghai for the rest of the war, and immigrated to Palestine in October 1947.
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10. Yonia Fain describes leaving Warsaw after the German invasion of Poland
required them to relocate to Shanghai in Japanese-occupied China in the fall ... of 1941. They remained in Shanghai for the duration of the war. In 1948, Yonia and his wife