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Altmann, Judith 2. Her sister Charlotte pt 2
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Altmann, Judith 3. Rounded up for the train
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Altmann, Judith 4. Cattle cars
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Altmann, Judith 5. Auschwitz arrival sorting.
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Altmann, Judith America
Judith Altmann feels that no one loves America more than the survivors [Annotator's Note: Holocaust survivors], because they know what freedom
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Altmann, Judith Arrival at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Losing Her Family
Judith Altmann arrived [Annotator's Note: Altmann arrived by rail car] at an unknown location and was greeted by men in striped uniforms shout
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Altmann, Judith Death March to Bergen Belsen and Liberation by the British
Judith Altmann recalled that it took three weeks, mostly traveling on foot, to move from Essen to Bergen-Belsen.
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Altmann, Judith Deportation
On the morning after the last day of Passover in 1942, two SS officers and two Hungarian gendarmes knocked on the window of Judith Altmann's h
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Altmann, Judith Early Life
Judith Altman was born in 1924 in Jasina, Czechoslovakia, into a family named Bohorochaleroba [Annotator's Note: phonetic spelling], later cha
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Altmann, Judith Essen, a Compassionate Guard and Lice
There were 2,000 Czech girls taken from Auschwitz at the time Judith Altmann left. From Gelsenkirchen, the prisoners were marched to Essen.
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Altmann, Judith Family During German Occupation
When the Germans occupied Jasina, they confiscated everything from Judith Altmann and the Bohrer family's farm.
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Altmann, Judith Gelsenkirchen
Judith Altmann recounts her stay at Gelsenkirchen, where the prisoners lived in tents.