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Commissaris van de Koningin CdK in Noord-Brabant, 1920 - 1969 > Onderscheidingen en eretekenen > Toekenning predikaten Koninklijk, Hofleverancier en Koninklijke Erepenning van Verdienste > Letter B, 1921 - 1969
Commissaris van de Koningin CdK in Noord-Brabant, 1920 - 1969 > Onderscheidingen en eretekenen > Toekenning predikaten Koninklijk, Hofleverancier en Koninklijke Erepenning van Verdienste > Letter V, 1921 - 1969
The letter was written to Evelyn Burg by her husband, Lester Burg, while he was serving with the American military in France during World War II. The letter, dated September 28, 1944, describes his experiences as a Jewish soldier in France, his knowledge of the ongoing Holocaust, and preparation for 1944 Yom Kippur services.
Consists of one letter, written by Rabbi Dr. Jehiel Weinberg, undated but circa 1946, to Dr. Marcus Cohen in Basel, Switzerland. In the letter, Rabbi Weinberg, the pre-war principal of the Hildesheimer Seminary in Berlin, writes about the wartime loss of his private library and asks his friend whether the Joint Distribution Committee might be able to assist him in acquiring some Jewish books recovered ...
The Samuel Sack letter consists of one typewritten letter, sent from Samuel Sack, a member of the XV Corps of the American Army, Sydney Dutton (later Sydney Bortner). The letter was written by Sack in Salzburg, Austria on May 26, 1945 and describes his wartime experiences in the spring of 1945. The letter describes battles in which his battalion participated and Sack’s experiences as a liberator of ...
William Brauer was born in Breslau, Germany. He was a survivor of Auschwitz and Gleiwitz camps.
The author of this copy letter written in Sütterlin script is unknown. The recipient, Heinrich Stern, was a lawyer and president of the <em>preussiche Landesverbandes der jüdische Gemeinden</em>
Consists of one letter written by Joseph Grünfeld on 30 April 1939 in Lwów, Poland, to Joseph Grünfeld in Bronx, NY. Mr. Grünfeld thanks his cousin for everything he is doing for him, asks him for further help in obtaining the affidavits and paperwork needed to emigrate to the United States, and states that he will not be a burden to anyone.
Envelope in which a letter written by Peter Ney was sent, addressed to his parents.
<p>Edia Bayer was the niece of the donor's grandfather. The family was from Nowy Korczyn in Poland. Edia, who writes from a concentration camp, managed to survive the Holocaust</p>