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"Holocaust survivor story."
45 professional editorial images found
#12296417
23 April 2025
A commemorative plaque is mounted on the wall at Watmarkt 5 in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. It honors Emilie and Oskar Schindler, who live in this house from November 1945 to September 1946 and are credited with saving over 1,200 Jews during the Nazi dictatorship. Their actions are internationally recognized through Steven Spielberg's film ''Schindler's List.''
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#12296418
23 April 2025
A commemorative plaque is mounted on the wall at Watmarkt 5 in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. It honors Emilie and Oskar Schindler, who live in this house from November 1945 to September 1946 and are credited with saving over 1,200 Jews during the Nazi dictatorship. Their actions are internationally recognized through Steven Spielberg's film ''Schindler's List.''
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#11687433
20 October 2024
Dr. Leon Weintraub, the Holocaust survivor, and Michael Souvignier, the producer of the film, are seen on the red carpet of the photocall for the film ''Feuhren und Verfuehrer'' at Film Palast in Cologne, Germany, on October 20, 2024, during the Cologne Film Festival 2024.
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#11687434
20 October 2024
Dr. Leon Weintraub, the Holocaust survivor, Michael Souvignier, the producer of the film, and film crews are on the red carpet of the photocall for the film ''Feuhren und Verfuehrer'' at Film Palast in Cologne, Germany, on October 20, 2024, during the Cologne Film Festival 2024.
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#11687436
20 October 2024
Dr. Leon Weintraub, the Holocaust survivor, and Michael Souvignier, the producer of the film, are seen on the red carpet of the photocall for the film ''Feuhren und Verfuehrer'' at Film Palast in Cologne, Germany, on October 20, 2024, during the Cologne Film Festival 2024.
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#10732908
31 October 2023
Undertakers carry the coffin as crowds arrive to pay respect to the late Polish Holocaust survivor, profesor Wanda Poltawska on October 31, 2023 in landmark Mariacki Church in Krakow, Poland. Wanda Poltawska, a survivor of the Holocaust in the Ravensbruck concentration camp, died a few days before her 102nd birthday. During her incarceration in the concentration camp, medical experiments were carried out on her. Poltawska was a close friend with the late Pope John Paul II.
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#10732920
31 October 2023
Crowds arrived to pay respect to the late Polish Holocaust survivor, profesor Wanda Poltawska on October 31, 2023 in landmark Mariacki Church in Krakow, Poland. Wanda Poltawska, a survivor of the Holocaust in the Ravensbruck concentration camp, died a few days before her 102nd birthday. During her incarceration in the concentration camp, medical experiments were carried out on her. Poltawska was a close friend with the late Pope John Paul II.
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#5432024
14 February 2020
Clila Bau-Cohen (Center) explains her parents story to visitors inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432096
14 February 2020
Clila Bau-Cohen (Center) explains her parents story to visitors inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432042
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau (L) and Clila Bau-Cohen explain their parents story to visitors inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432046
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau holds a set of cards with her father Holocaust caricatures inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432048
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau shares with visitors her parents Rebecca and Joseph Bau story, inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432002
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau (L) and Clila Bau-Cohen (R) seen next to their father's Auschwitz posters 'Entrance Thru Gate' inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432004
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau her parents photos inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432014
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau holds her father's painting 'Neshek Neshika' inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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#5432020
14 February 2020
Hadasa Bau holds 'Dear God, Have You Ever Gone Hungry?' book by her father Joseph Bau inside 'Joseph Bau house' Museum in Tel Aviv. Joseph Bau was a Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, inventor, animator, comedian, commercial creator, copy-writer, photographer and poet. He trained as a graphic artist at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow. During WW2 he was transferred to the Plaszow concentration camp, where he met and secretly married Rebecca Tennenbaum. Their story inspired Steven Spielberg and their wedding is shown in Spielberg movie 'Schindler's List'. Later, Josef was transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then to Schindler's camp where he stayed until the end of the war, while Rebecca was sent to Auschwitz. Both survived and after the war, Josef reunited with his wife, finished his Art degree in Krakow, then in 1950, they immigrated to Israel, where Joseph worked as a graphic artist at the Brandwein Institute in Haifa and for the government of Israel. His paintings and drawings have been listed by Sotheby's as significant contributions to the art of the Holocaust. On Tuesday, 11 February 2020, in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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