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Weinreich, Frieda Postwar and Immigrating to America
Frieda Weinreich went to the Landsberg Displaced Persons Camp located outside of Munich, Germany.
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Weinreich, Frieda Reflections
Frieda Weinreich remembered that it took a little while to adjust to the United States because she did not speak English.
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Weinreich, Frieda The Lodz Ghetto
A couple of months after Lodz [Annotator's Note: Lodz, Ploand] was taken, all the Jews were put in the Lodz Ghetto.
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Weinreich, Frieda War’s End and Liberation
Frieda Weinreich remembered two girls who ran away from a work camp and ended up coming to the Parschnitz Slave Labor Camp.
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Weinthal, Siegfried New Life in America
Siegfried Weinthal was born in February 1929 in Esens, Germany, a small town in Northern Germany. His childhood did not last long.
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Weinthal, Siegfried Occupation Duty in Europe
In April 1946, Siegfried Weinthal enlisted in the Army because he wanted to return to Europe.
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Weinthal, Siegfried Reflections
Siegfried Weinthal's most memorable experience of World War 2 was when he returned to his hometown of Esens, Germany as a GI [Annotator's
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Weiss, Charlotte 1. Arrival at Auschwitz
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Weiss, Charlotte 2. Charlotte saves her sister
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Weiss, Charlotte Arrival at Auschwitz
[Annotator's Note: Charlotte Weiss is a Czechoslovakian born Jew who survived incarceration in a number of concentration camps including Ausch
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Weiss, Charlotte Experiences Before Being Arrested
Charlotte Weiss is a Holocaust survivor.
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Weiss, Charlotte Sent to Allach and Liberation by US Forces
They [Annotator's Note: Charlotte Weiss and her four sisters] were in Geislingen for nine months when Mr.
