Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Jeker School in Amsterdam - The Elementary School of Sanne Ledermann. Susanne "Sanne" Ledermann (7 October 1928 – 19 November 1943) was a German Jewish girl who was murdered in the Auschwitz concentration camp. She was best-known for her friendship with sisters Anne and Margot Frank .

  2. Susanne Sanne Ledermann ( Berlín, 7 de octubre de 1928- Auschwitz, 19 de noviembre de 1943) fue una joven judeoalemana, amiga de la infancia de Ana Frank durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial y víctima del Holocausto . Biografía.

  3. Born: October 8, 1928. Berlin, Germany. Auschwitz. Susanne was the younger of two daughters born to Jewish parents in the German capital of Berlin. Her father was a successful lawyer. Known affectionately as Sanne, Susanne liked to play with her sister on the veranda of her home and enjoyed visiting the Berlin Zoo and park with her family.

  4. Susanne Ledermann. Born on: Oct. 7, 1928. Born in: Berlijn, Duitsland. Died on: Nov. 19, 1943. Died in: Auschwitz. Foto van Eva Goldberg, Sanne Ledermann en Anne Frank, Merwedeplein, Amsterdam, 1936. Vervaadiger: Helene Goldberg-Wechsler. Fotocollectie: Anne Frank Stichting, Amsterdam.

  5. víctima judeoalemana del holocausto / De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. Susanne Sanne Ledermann ( Berlín, 7 de octubre de 1928- Auschwitz, 19 de noviembre de 1943) fue una joven judeoalemana, amiga de la infancia de Ana Frank durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial y víctima del Holocausto.

  6. Little Bear minus two was the name of the table-tennis club of Anne and four of her friends. Sanne Ledermann was the 'leader', Jacqueline van Maarsen 'secretary' and Anne, Ilse Wagner and Hanneli Goslar were members. Anne writes in her diary that the name was chosen based on the incorrect assumption that the constellation the Great Bear ...

  7. When they visited their niece Eva Goldberg, a daughter of their sister Helene, they brought her into contact with Anne Frank and Sanne Ledermann. She could also talk German with them. In July 1936, Helene Goldberg-Wechsler took a photo of the three girls.