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United States. Selective Service System. New York City Headquarters.
[FLYER] SELECTIVE SERVICE REGISTRATION WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1940
Single sided flyer. [1] page. 56 x 41 cm. Large announcement for the draft of all males over 21 and under 36, declaring the need to register and the ability to do so at any local public school in the Assembly district, from 7am to 9pm on October 16th. Includes 11 points of information that will be needed to fill out the draft register. An interesting period piece, with tape still clinging to edges, ostensibly from when this document was torn down; Subjects: Draft registration New York City. United States. Army - Recruiting, enlistment, etc. - World War, 1939-1945. Slightly torn upper left corner and tear at tape line on right portion. Upper edges lightly chipped and bumped. Previously folded in a poor fashion, leaving various crease lines. Otherwise, clean and fresh. Good condition. (LB-5-26)
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Conference On Jewish Relations (U. S. ) . Medical Committee On Research.
JEWS AND MEDICINE - TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW.
Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 8 pages. 23 cm. Holocaust-era Publication by the Medical Committee of the organization Conference on Jewish Relations; this sociological study outlines the findings of research into the medical profession, the ratio of Jewish doctors to population, their dispersal geographically in the United States (with an accompanying map) , and proposals for the need to eliminate the quota system in the higher education system which prevents Jews from entering into diverse professions, as well as a proposal for where doctors in exile from the troubles in Europe can emigrate to (specifically, areas with low concentrations, not only of Jewish doctors, but doctors in general) . What is the status of Jews in the field of medicine, and what are their prospects? Are too many of them crowding the profession or are many turned away unjustly? How extensive or justified is the limitation on Jews in medical schools, on hospital staffs, or in certain specialized medical societies? Has our general standard of medical practice been sufficiently high to deserve greater prestige? What does the future hold out for us and what if anything should we do about it? The Conference on Jewish Relations has been studying these and other questions in the conviction that there can be no sound policies of proper adjustment to our fellow citizens without an adequate basis of accurate information as to the actual conditions. The piece also outlines, besides the systemic Antisemitism of the higher university system, the social Antisemitism of towns and locales wherein hotels or businesses bar Jews from admittance, owing to the presence of Nazi and K K K organizations, the same types of groups who repeatedly stereotype the Jew practicing medicine. Includes original laid-in business reply envelope of the Conference on Jewish Relations. The Conference on Jewish Relations was later known as the Conference on Jewish Social Studies; the Conference published the journal Jewish Social Studies. Subjects: Jewish physicians. Two listings on OCLC (HUC, UT Austin) . Clean and fresh. Very good + condition. (LB-5-34)
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(Mahon, Dennis J) Bloom, Sol
[FASCIMILE TELEGRAM] SOL BLOOM TELEGRAM; JEWISH NEW YEAR
Single sided flyer. [1] page. 20 x 16 cm. Enlarged facsimile reproduction of a Western Union telegram, addressed to Hon Dennis J Mahon 205 West 89 St. The contents of the telegram are as follows: Dear Denny stop I bitterly resent unfair political use by Sol Tekulsky of strictly Jewish new year greeting telegram stop I repudiate these tactics. Am in New York campaigning for you stop. Am with you one hundred percent stop I urge all my friends to support you by voting group eight today = Sol Bloom. Apparently a political flyer aimed at getting American Jews to support Mahon and reject Tekulsky. Subjects: American politics. New York politics. Controversy. Light ageing, otherwise fresh and clean. Good condition. (LB-5-45) Xx
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Kalugai, Itzhak
[SELECTED TOPICS IN INORGANIC CHEMISTRY]
Original Wraps. 8vo. 35, [1] pages. 24 cm. Only edition. In Hebrew. An early publication from the Chemistry Department of Industrial Engineering from the Technion Institute in Haifa, a treatise on Inorganic Chemistry, written by one of the first chemistry professors at the Technion, Itzhak Kalugai, a writer not only of treatises of chemistry, but also of detailed histories of famous chemists. Subjects: Inorganic Chemistry. Chemistry Israel. OCLC lists 3 copies (Natl Libr Israel, Weizmann Inst, Israel Inst of Tech) , none outside Israel. Light edge wear to wraps, otherwise fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-105-33)
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Margoles Dav?idzon, Khaim
MIT DER DRATVE - A TSI: DERTSEYLUNG VEGN DEM LEBN FUN IDN IN DER VARSHEVER GETO
(FT) Paperwrappers. 8vo. 32 pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Title page verso: "Mit der dratve-A tzi" (And the Heel Was Threaded) A story of Jewish Life in the Warsaw Ghetto. Khaim Margoles Dav? Idzon (1891-1960) Born in Warsaw, died in New York. Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 -- Fiction. Jews -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Fiction. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Fiction. OCLC lists 13 copies worldwide. Paper wrappers lightly worn and stained at edges. Pages fresh. Very good+ condition. Scarce, early, and important. (HOLO2-80-5)
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[N. S. ]
KOL NIDRE PRAYER PAMPHLET
Prayer Pamphlet from from Kol Nidre service of American synagogue. 16mo. One sheet. 18 cm. In English with some Hebrew. There is a reference to the Holocaust in the header, which states: To the Congregation. Mindful of the distressed condition of the Jews of Germany, let us commune together as the choir sings the words of the following anthem followed by Psalm 86. Light crease, otherwise in very good condition. (AMR-38-13)
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Ribáry, Géza. Munkácsi, Erno. Kohn, Zoltán
HAGGÁDA [OMZSA HAGADAH]
Cloth with dustjacket. Various pagings, Illus. 34 cm. Reprint of Holocaust-era hagadah, published in 1942 Axis Hungary. Published by the Országos Magyar Zsidó Segito Akció (Hungarian Jewish Aid Action) , a self-assisting organization founded in 1939 as a social aid program for the needy. ISBN: 9632721187. OCLC lists only 13 copies worldwide. SUBJECT(S) : Haggadot -- Texts. Seder -- Liturgy -- Texts. Judaism -- Liturgy -- Texts. Cover title: OMZSA Haggáda. (HAG-8-27)
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Charleston, Sc) Reznikoff, Charles. with The Collaboration Of Uriah Engelman. Forewd by Salo Baron
THE JEWS OF CHARLESTON [SOUTH CAROLINA]--A HISTORY OF AN AMERICAN JEWISH COMMUNITY
8vo; 343 pages; Original Publisher's Cloth. 8vo. 343 pages. The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. 8 pages of plates. 22 cm. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Edges worn and dusty, otherwise very good condition. (AMR-41-44)
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Kohler, Max J.
IMMIGRATION AND ALIENS IN THE UNITED STATES; STUDIES OF AMERICAN IMMIGRATION LAWS AND THE LEGAL STATUS OF ALIENS IN THE UNITED STATES
8vo. 2 pages. L. , iii-x pages. , 1 l. , 459 pages. In English. SUBJECT (S) : Emigration and immigration law -- United States. Aliens -- United States. United States -- Emigration and immigration. (AMR-34-14)
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Neusner, Jacob.
STRANGER AT HOME: "THE HOLOCAUST," ZIONISM, AND AMERICAN JUDAISM.
8vo. Ix, 213 pages. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Judaism United States history -- 20th century; Jews United States identity; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) influence; Zionism United States history; Jews United States attitudes toward Israel. CONTENTS: Prologue; The problematic of Judaism in America: identity, self-hatred, and the crisis of community; Response to freedom I: the place of the Holocaust in American Judaism; Response to freedom II: the place of Zionism in American Judaism; Toward a theory of Zionism for American Judaism; Summing up: Zionism, the Jewish problem, and Judaism. ISBN: 0226576280. Neusner (b. 1932) was born in Hartford, Connecticut, and was ordained rabbi at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He served on the faculties of Columbia University, the University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee) , Dartmouth College, and Brown University. He was also active in several professional organizations and learned societies; in 196869 he served as president of the American Academy of Religion. (Goodblatt, EJ) Has dust jacket. Ex library, otherwise good condition. (AMR-34-25)
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Aszendorf, Israel; Ben (Benn), illustrator
VEY UN VANDER: LIDER
Original Wraps. 8vo. 123 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Inscribed by the author. Title page verso: Wei oun wander; Douleur sans foyer, poe´sies. Sorrow Without a Home, post-holocaust poetry, with some pre-war poems, by Israel Aszendorf; published in Paris by the Yiddish Writers Club, illustrated by the famous Jewish artist, Benn. With frontispiece portrait of the author. Israel Ashendorf (19091956) , Yiddish poet, short story writer, and dramatist. Ashendorf grew up and lived in Lemberg (Lwow) , Galicia (now Lviv, Ukraine) , until World War II, when he fled to Uzbekistan. He spent five years in Paris and immigrated to Argentina in 1953. In Buenos Aires he served as supervisor of Jewish secular schools, taught Hebrew and Yiddish literature, and contributed to the Yidishe Tsaytung. His first poems were published in 1927, and thereafter he contributed to Yiddish periodicals in Europe, the Americas, and Israel. In 1929, he was co-editor of the literary journal Tsushtayer. Collections of his poetry were published in 1937, 1939, 1941, 1950, and 1956. His biblical dramas Der Meylekh Shoel (King Saul, 1948) and Der Meylekh Dovid (King David, 1956) express a pessimistic worldview. The posthumous collection Letste Shriftn (Last Writings, 1958) includes his poems and short stories. (EJ, 2007) Subjects: Yiddish Poetry. OCLC lists 20 copies. Front cover repair, backstrip torn at top and bottom, first page lightly torn at edge; otherwise, clean and fresh, binding firm. Good condition. (YID-18-1)
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Kazdan, Hayyim Solomon
DI GESHIKHTE FUN YIDISHN SHULVEZN IN UMOPHENGIKN POYLN
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 571 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Di geshikhte fun yidishn shulvezn in umophengikn poyln (The History of the Jewish School Movement in Independent Poland) ; published in Mexico; written by Khayim Shloyme Kazdan (1883-1979) , a Bundist, educator, and leader of the secular Yiddish school movement.
Between 1918 and 1920, Kazdan served as secretary of the influential Kiev-based Kultur-lige. Taking an active interest in the Yiddish school movement, he helped to establish Shul un lebn (School and Life) the first pedagogical journal in Yiddish. He moved to Warsaw in 1920, and maintained his active roles in the Yiddish school movement and the Bund. He was one of the principal leaders and founders of the Central Yiddish School Organization (TSYSHO) , a network of secularsocialist Yiddish schools founded in June 1921 in Poland. Kazdan wrote for the TSYSHO press and published curriculum guides for secular Yiddish schools; among his contributions were the Program fun yidish-limed in der 7-klasiker folks-shul (Syllabus for the Study of Yiddish in the Seventh-Grade Folk School; 1925) , Metodik fun yidisher shprakh (A Yiddish Language Curriculum; 1939) , as well as many articles on educational theory and the secular Yiddish schools. In the 1930s, Kazdan served as director of TSYSHO in Warsaw. (Yivo Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe) . Subjects: Jews - Education - Poland. Z´ydowska Centralna Organizacja Szkolna. Light wear to edges of cloth and endpages, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-8)
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Eisenbach, Artur
DI HITLERISTISHE POLITIK FUN YIDN-FARNIKHTUNG: IN DI YORN 1939-1945: VI AN OYSDRUK FUN DAYTSHISHN IMPERYALIZM [ERSHTER BUKH]
Original Wraps. 8vo. 222, [2] pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Book one only. The Hitlerite Policy of Jewish-Destruction, in the years 1939-1945; an expression of German imperialism. At head of title: Yidisher Historisher Institut in Poyln. The author also published in 1955 a Yiddish volume concerning the Remilitarization of West Germany and the Role of Hitlers Generals. Written by Artur Eisenbach (19061992) , a Polish Jewish historian. Artur Eisenbach was one of the last representatives of a distinguished group of scholars who, in the years before World War I and in independent Poland between 1918 and 1939, laid the foundation for an investigation of the Polish Jewish past.
He was influenced primarily by the Marxist school of Jewish historians, in particular by Raphael Mahler and Emanuel Ringelblum (whose sister he married) . Eisenbach was an active member of the Yunger Historiker Krayz (Young Historians Circle) founded by Mahler and Ringelblum. Eisenbach spent World War II in the Soviet Union, but his wife and child were trapped in Buczacz, where they were murdered by the Nazis in 1942. After his return to Poland in May 1946, he worked at the Central Historical Commission of the Central Committee of Polish Jews. When the Jewish Historical Institute was established later that year, he was appointed head of its archives, and subsequently became a researcher. In the decade following the war, Eisenbach devoted himself entirely to studying the Holocaust. Later he gradually returned to the theme that he had devoted himself to before the warJewish emancipation in the first half of the nineteenth century. In 1966, he became a member of the Committee for the Historical Sciences at the Polish Academy of Sciences and was awarded the title of professor. In the same year, he was appointed director of the Jewish Historical Institute. In 1968, Eisenbach was forced to resign his latter position, and retained only his title at the Polish Academy of Sciences. He decided not to emigrate and in the following years produced a series of monographs on Polish Jewish problems in the first half of the nineteenth century, research that formed the essential basis for future work on this subject. He also continued to work on Holocaust themes, editing Ringelblums diary and essay on PolishJewish relations. In his last years, he moved to Israel, where he had a nephew and where, active as ever, he worked on an account of PolishJewish relations in the nineteenth century. (Yivo Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Germany - Politics and government - 1933-1945. Light wear to wraps, pages lightly aged, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-11)
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Schulstein, Moses
A BOYM TSVISHN HURVES: LIDER UN POEMES
Publishers cloth. O. 290 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. A Tree in the Ruins: Poems, a collection of Holocaust poems, by Moses (Moyshe) Schulstein (1911-1981) , a Yiddish left wing poet from Poland, he survived the holocaust and moved to Paris; his famous poem I Saw a Mountain (found in this collection) is found on the wall of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - Poetry. OCLC lists 29 copies. The US Holocaust Museum in Washington keeps their copy in their Rare Book Collection. Missing front cover, otherwise complete, binding repaired; pages lightly aged, otherwise clean and Good. (HOLO2-108-16)
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Matz, Reinhard
DIE UNSICHTBAREN LAGER: DAS VERSCHWINDEN DER VERGANGENHEIT IM GEDENKEN
Original Wraps. 8vo. 206, [1] pages. 23 cm. First edition. In German. The Invisible Camp: the dissapearance of the past in memory. With contributing essays from Andrzej Szczypiorski, Klaus Staemmler, and Christa Schuenke. A provocative contemporary documentation and analysis of the concentration camps in their function as museum; with 180 photographs. Published in conjunction with the Fritz Bauer Institute. Subjects: Konzentrationslager - Deutschland - Geschichte 1933-1945. Gedenkstätte - Judenvernichtung - Bildband. Judenvernichtung - Gedenkstätte - Bildband. Light wear to wraps, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-30)
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Schoenberner, Gerhard; M Coutinho (Maurice Sigismund)
DE GELE STER: DE JODENVERVOLGING IN EUROPA VAN 1933 TOT 1945
Publishers cloth. 4to. 223 pages. 26 cm. First Dutch edition. Translated from the German. The Yellow Star: The Persecution of the Jews in Europe, 1933-1945. With 196 photographs. Originally published in 1960 in German as Der Gelbe Stern, this landmark book was one of the first comprehensive photographic accounts of the Holocaust. During the 1950s, researchers in Washington, D. C. And London pored over more than 1, 500 tons of photographs and documents seized after World War II. In 1960 Gerhard Schoenberner gathered some 200 photographs from the newly uncovered material, most of them taken by Nazis to chronicle their war against the Jews. Schoenberner named the book after the yellow badge that the Nazis forced the persecuted Jews to wear. With its comprehensive, authoritative presentation of visual and textual evidence, much of which had not yet not been seen before, The Yellow Star shocked the German population and introduced the world to many haunting images. The book endures as one of the most important documentary accounts of the Holocaust, reprinted in many German editions and published in eight languages. The photographs are accompanied by extracts from Nazi and German documents-laws, decrees, and other Reich memoranda, field reports from SS officers and concentration camp directors, newspaper editorials, and other writings. Schoenberner also provides detailed captions to the photographs. Organized chronologically, the book follows the growing scope and terror of the Holocaust, from the first anti-Jewish laws and Kristallnacht to ghetto uprisings and the Final Solution, culminating in the liberation of the death camps. (Publishers description to English edition) . Subjects: Holocaust. Antisemitisme. Europa (geografie) . OCLC lists 14 copies. Light tear to top of backstrip; no DJ; otherwise fresh and clean. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-31)
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[Eggersglüss, Georg]
AUS DER GESCHICHTE DER AURICHER JUDENGEMEINDE, 1592-1940. AUSSTELLUNG VON IGS WAHLKURS DOKUMENTEN 7. JAHRGANG, 21./22. FEBRUAR 1975. IM RAHMEN DER TAGE DER OFFENEN TÜR.
Later cloth. 4to. 88 leaves. 30 cm. First edition. Fascimile. In German. On the History of the Jewish Community of Aurich, 1592-1940. Compiled photocopy booklet for a course at the IGS School in Aurich, bound in later cloth; illustrated, with several maps, family registers, and historical and legal documents. Subjects: Jews - Germany - Aurich (Lower Saxony) . OCLC lists two copies (HUC, Univ Florida) . Previous owners name on endpage, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-108-34)
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Paul, Gerhard
MATROSENANZUG-DAVIDSTERN: BILDER JÜDISCHEN LEBENS AUS DER PROVINZ
Publishers cloth. 4to. 373 pages. 30 cm. First edition. In German. Sailor Suit-Star of David; Images of Jewish Life from the Province of Schleswig-Holstein. Over 600 illustrations from eight different family photo albums detailing 70 years of Jewish life in Schleswig-Holstein from 1871 until after 1945; with emphasis on daily life, cultural activities, Zionism, and the holocaust period. Subjects: Jews - Germany - Schleswig-Holstein - History - Pictorial works. Jews - Cultural assimilation - Germany - Schleswig Holstein - Pictorial works. Jews - Persecutions - Germany -- Schleswig-Holstein - Pictorial works. Alltag. Schleswig-Holstein (Germany) - Ethnic relations - Pictorial works. Schleswig-Holstein (Germany) - Civilization - Jewish influences - Pictorial works. Light shelf wear to edges of cloth, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-36)
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Jäckle, Renate
SCHICKSALE JÜDISCHER UND "STAATSFEINDLICHER" ÄRZTINNEN UND ÄRZTE NACH 1933 IN MÜNCHEN: ERGEBNISSE DES ARBEITSKREISES "FASCHISMUS IN MÜNCHEN--AUFGEZEIGT AM SCHICKSAL DER AUS 'RASSISCHEN' UND/ODER POLITISCHEN GRÜNDEN VERFOLGTEN OPFER IN DER MÜNCHNER ÄRZTESCHAFT"
Original illustrated wraps. 4to. 139 pages. 26 cm. First edition. In German. The Fate of Jewish and Subversive Doctors in Munich after 1933; Findings of the Study Group Fascism in Munich. Historical essays, with photographs, period documents, and biographies, of doctors in Munich who were persecuted on religious or political grounds during the Nazi era; published by a study group of the List of Democratic Physicians, an organization established in 1986 comprising physicians and doctors with a social commitment to their patients and profession. With 148 Illustrations. Subjects: Jews - Germany - Munich - Biography. Jewish physicians - Germany - Munich - Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Germany - Munich - Biography. Arzt. Munich (Germany) - Ethnic relations. Light wear to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-38)
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Gorschenek, Günter; Stephan Reimers
OFFENE WUNDEN, BRENNENDE FRAGEN: JUDEN IN DEUTSCHLAND VON 1938 BIS HEUTE
Original Illustrated Wraps. 8vo. 174 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In German. Open Wounds, Burning Questions: Jews in Germany from 1938 to the Present. A collection of essays on different facets of twentieth century German-Jewish history since Kristallnacht. Subjects: Jews - Germany - History - 1933-1945. Jews - Germany (West) - History. Jews - Germany - Regensburg - History. Germany - Ethnic relations. Regensburg (Germany) - Ethnic relations. Light shelf wear to wraps and outer edges, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-40) Xxxx
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Brager, Edgar
DURCH DIE WELT NACH HAUSE
Original Wraps. 8vo. 233 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In German. Memoir of a Jewish German Refugee in the holocaust period. Subjects: Jewish refugees - United States - Biography. Holocaust survivors - Biography. Autobiographie. OCLC lists 21 copies. Light wear to wraps along backstrip, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-41)
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Brager, Edgar
DURCH DIE WELT NACH HAUSE
Hardbound original wraps. 8vo. 233 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In German. Memoir of a Jewish German Refugee in the holocaust period. Hardbound wraps. Subjects: Jewish refugees - United States - Biography. Holocaust survivors - Biography. Autobiographie. OCLC lists 21 copies. Institutional stamps on endpages, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-108-41A)
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Bak, Samuel
SAMUEL BAK: RETURN TO VILNA
Original illustrated wraps. 4to. 44 pages. 28 cm. First edition. Catalog of two exhibitions, Return to Vilna I and Return to Vilna II, held between 31 August and 20 November, 2002 at Pucker Gallery, Boston, Mass. With 67 full color illustrations. Samuel Bak was born in Vilna. A few years later the area was incorporated into the independent republic of Lithuania. He was eight when the Germans occupied the city. Bak began painting while still a child and, prompted by the well-known Yiddish poet Abraham Sutzkever, held his first exhibition (in the Vilna ghetto) in 1942 at the age of nine. From the ghetto the family was sent to a labor camp on the outskirts of the city. Bak's father managed to save his son by dropping him in a sack out of a ground floor window of the warehouse where he was working; he was met by a maid and brought to the house where his mother was hiding. His father was shot by the Germans in July 1944, a few days before Soviet troops liberated the city. His four grandparents had earlier been executed at the killing site outside Vilna called Ponary. After the war, the young Bak continued painting at the Displaced Persons camp in Landsberg, Germany (194548) , where he also studied painting in Munich. In 1948, he and his mother immigrated to Israel, where he studied for a year at the Bezalel Art School in Jerusalem. After fulfilling his military service, he spent three years (195659) at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He then moved to Rome (195966) , returned to Israel (196674) , and lived for a time in New York City (197477) . There followed further years in Israel and Paris, then a long stay in Switzerland (198493) . From 1993 Bak lived and worked outside Boston, in Weston, Massachusetts. (EJ 2007) Subjects: Bak, Samuel - Exhibitions. Holocaust Art - Vilna. OCLC lists 21 copies. Light wear to wraps, otherwise fresh and clean. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-108-44)
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Charleston, Sc) Reznikoff, Charles. with The Collaboration Of Uriah Engelman. Forewd by Salo Baron
THE JEWS OF CHARLESTON [SOUTH CAROLINA]--A HISTORY OF AN AMERICAN JEWISH COMMUNITY
8vo; 343 pages; Original Publisher's Cloth with dustjacket. 8vo. 343 pages. The first Jews settled in the area in the 1600s. Originally the community was Sephardic, later Ashkenazic. The Jewish community provided many soldiers for the Civil War. Photo endpapers compliment this thorough Southern Jewish community history. 8 pages of plates. 22 cm. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 267-325. Subject : Jews -- South Carolina -- Charleston. Ex-library. Otherwise, very good condition. (MX-35-20)
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Suzman, Arthur; Denis Diamond.
SIX MILLION DID DIE: THE TRUTH SHALL PREVAIL
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 119 pages. 25cm. First edition. Profusely illustrated with black and white photographs, facsimile documents, and a map showing the locations of the concentration and extermination camps. Pictorial white card covers with black and red lettering on the spine and front. A strong rebuttal to holocaust deniers with extensive evidence, and an examination of important documents and accounts relating to the Holocaust. Subjects: Holocaust denial criticism and response. Some shelf-wear and light rubbing. Ex-library with minimal marks, Very good condition. (HOLO2-107-2)
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Brenner, David A.
GERMAN-JEWISH POPULAR CULTURE BEFORE THE HOLOCAUST: KAFKA'S KITSCH
Publishers Boards. 8vo. 118pages. 24cm. First edition. Using modern social theory, David Brenner examines how German-Jewish identity was influenced by the production and consumption of popular culture. Part of the Routledge Jewish Studies Series. David A. Brenner examines how Jews in Central Europe developed one of the first ethnic or minority cultures in modernity. Not exclusively German or Jewish, the experiences of German-speaking Jewry in the decades prior to the Third Reich and the Holocaust were also negotiated in encounters with popular culture, particularly the novel, the drama and mass media. Despite recent scholarship, the misconception persists that Jewish Germans were bent on assimilation. Although subject to compulsion, they did not become solely German, much less European. Yet their behavior and values were by no means exclusively Jewish, as the Nazis or other anti-Semites would have it. Rather, the German Jews achieved a peculiar synthesis between 1890 and 1933, developing a culture that was not only middle-class but also ethnic. In particular, they reinvented Judaic traditions by way of a hybridized culture. Based on research in German, Israeli and American archives, German-Jewish Popular Culture before the Holocaust addresses many of the genres in which a specifically German-Jewish identity was performed, from the Yiddish theatre and Zionist humour all the way to sensationalist memoirs and Kafkas own kitsch. This middle-class ethnic identity encompassed and went beyond religious confession and identity politics. In focusing principally on German-Jewish popular culture, this groundbreaking book introduces the beginnings of ethnicity as we know it and live it today. (Publishers description. ) Subjects: Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. Massenkultur. Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. . Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-5) Xxxx
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Gregor, Neil
HAUNTED CITY: NUREMBERG AND THE NAZI PAST
Publishers Cloth. 8vo. Pages. 24cm. First edition. "Nuremberg - a city associated with Nazi excesses, party rallies, and the extreme anti-Semitic propaganda published by Hitler ally Julius Streicher - has struggled since the Second World War to come to terms with the material and moral legacies of Nazism. Haunted City explores how the Nuremberg community has confronted the implications of the genocide in which it participated, while also dealing with the appalling suffering of ordinary German citizens during and after the war. Neil Gregor's compelling account of the painful process of remembering and acknowledging the Holocaust offers new insights into postwar memory in Germany and how it has operated. Gregor takes a novel approach to the theme of memory, commemoration, and remembrance, and he proposes a highly nuanced explanation for the failure of Germans to face up to the Holocaust for years after the war. His book makes a major contribution to the social and cultural history of Germany. " (Dust jacket) . Subjects: National socialism --Psychological aspects. Collective memory -- Germany -- Nuremberg. Reconstruction (1939-1951) -- Germany -- Nuremberg. Nuremberg War Crime Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, 1946-1949. Nuremberg (Germany) -- History -- 20th century. Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-6)
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Kliot, Rasia, Helen Mitsios
WALTZING WITH THE ENEMY: A MOTHER AND DAUGHTER CONFRONT THE AFTERMATH OF THE HOLOCAUST
Softbound. 8vo. 287 pages. 24cm. Illustrated. First edition. Inscribed by author Helen Mitsios. Photo Album appendix contains black and white photographs and reproductions of documents. Filled with insight and humor, this dual memoir by Rasia, born in Vilnius, Lithuania (who survived the Holocaust on a false identity) , and her daughter Helen, born in Montreal, Canada, examines the long-term implications of being a survivor of the Holocaust and the unique pressures and anxieties the children of survivors inherit from their parents. Rasia, determined to protect Helen from anti-Semitism, continues to pose as a Christian and raises her daughter in the Catholic faith, forbidding her from mentioning her Jewish identity. This compassionate memoir addresses the unspoken tension that complicated a mother-daughter relationship, follows Helen on her journey to embrace Judaism, and is a heart-stopping story of escape and survival from Nazi terror. (Publishers description) . Subjects: Jews -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- Personal narratives. Holocaust survivors -- Lithuania -- Vilnius -- Personal narratives. Children of Holocaust survivors -- United States -- Biography. Jews -- United States -- Biography. Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-9)
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Rosenfeld, Harvey, Eli Zborowski.
A LEGACY RECORDED: AN ANTHOLOGY OF MARTYRDOM AND RESISTANCE
Publishers Cloth. 8vo. 367 pages. 22cm. Illustrated First edition. Collecting 20 years of articles from the periodical Martyrdom and Resistance. As the oldest, continual periodical devoted to the Holocaust, M&R has, understandably, become a valuable resource for scholars and researchers. Its unique quality lies in the combination of news and features about all aspects of the Holocaust and resistance, including book and film reviews, reports about educational programs, and a presentation of survivor activities. (Introduction) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Holocaust survivors. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Influence. No DJ, Very good plus condition. (HOLO2-107-10)Xx
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McDonald, James G. , Richard Breitman Ed. , Barbara McDonald Stewart Ed. , Severin Hochberg Ed.
ADVOCATE FOR THE DOOMED: THE DIARIES AND PAPERS OF JAMES G. MCDONALD, 1932-1935
Publishers Cloth. 8vo. X, 838 pages. 25cm. Illustrated. First edition. [16] pages of plates. The private diary of James G. McDonald (18861964) offers a unique and hitherto unknown source on the early history of the Nazi regime and the Roosevelt administrations reactions to Nazi persecution of German Jews. Considered for the post of U. S. Ambassador to Germany at the start of FDRs presidency, McDonald traveled to Germany in 1932 and met with Hitler soon after the Nazis came to power. Fearing Nazi intentions to remove or destroy Jews in Germany, in 1933 he became League of Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and sought aid from the international community to resettle outside the Reich Jews and others persecuted there. In late 1935 he resigned in protest at the lack of support for his work. This is the eagerly awaited first of a projected three-volume work that will significantly revise the ways that scholars and the world view the antecedents of the Holocaust, the Shoah itself, and its aftermath. (Publishers description) Subjects: Diplomats -- United States -- Diaries. World War, 1939-1945 -- Refugees -- Sources. Antisemitism -- History -- 20th century -- Sources. National socialism -- Germany -- History -- 20th century -- Sources. McDonald, James G. (James Grover) , 1886-1964 -- Diaries. McDonald, James G. Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-11)
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Mostowicz, Arnold
BALLADA O SLEPYM MAKSIE
Softbound. 8vo. 181 pages. 25 cm. First edition. In Polish. Arnold Mostowicz was born in 1914, the only son of a middle-class Jewish family. He grew up in Lodz which, before the German invasion, had a population of at least a quarter of a million Jews and was a prominent and prosperous centre. At the age of 19, and because as a Jew I did not have a chance of studying medicine at a Polish university, he travelled to France and enrolled as a medical student. Upon completing his studies he returned to Poland in July 1939, and when, in September, all young men were called to defend Poland against the Nazi invasion, he packed up two shirts, a jar of home-made jam and a volume of poems and walked to Warsaw to join the war. During the siege of Warsaw, Mostowicz worked as a physician in the Child Jesu Hospital where he treated victims of the German air raids. When Warsaw capitulated, Mostowicz returned to Lodz and the ghetto. There he worked in the isolation department of the hospital, and took part in the resistance movement. By the end of the war almost all of the ghetto's inhabitants were gone - either dead from starvation and exhaustion or sent to death camps. Mostowicz himself was deported, in 1944, to Auschwitz, before being moved to the Gross Rosen concentration camp from which he was liberated in May 1945. Most of his family, including his parents, perished at Treblinka and at other camps. For a time after the war Mostowicz ran a hospital but he soon turned his back on medicine and devoted himself to writing. He was editor of the satirical Polish magazine Szpilki, before being ousted in an anti-Semitic Communist purge in 1968. Mostowicz wrote science fiction and books about Lodz, as well as an autobiographical memoir, The Yellow Star (1989) . In 1994, he founded the Monumentum Judaicum Lodzense Association, to maintain the cultural heritage of Lodz's Jews. (The Telegraph, 2/8/2002) Subjects: Jews -- Poland -- Lodz -- Biography. Borensztain, Max. Lodz (Poland) -- Biography.. OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide. (CT State University, Florida Atlantic Univ, HUC, Natl. Libr of Israel. ) Occasional pencil marking in text, inscription on title page. Very good + condition. Difficult to find. (HOLO2-107-12)
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Robinson, Nehemiah
THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE WORLD JEWISH CONGRESS
Original Wrappers. 8vo. Vi, 285 pages. 23 cm. First edition. An examination of the role and effectiveness of the World Jewish Congress as the first Jewish non-governmental organization to be granted consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. (Preface) Nehemiah Robinson (18981964) , international lawyer. Born in Vitys, Lithuania, he studied law and political science at the University of Jena, Germany, and from 1927 practiced law in Kovno with his brother Jacob *Robinson . Soon after his arrival in New York (December 1940) , he joined the Institute of Jewish Affairs and was appointed its director in 1947, in which post he continued until his death. He published a number of books and numerous articles on contemporary Jewish affairs, the United Nations, prosecution of war criminals, and indemnification of the victims of Nazi persecution. Robinson was International Law Adviser to the *World Jewish Congress . In the negotiations of the *Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany with German authorities at The Hague, Robinson acted as chief adviser in formulating the agreement on indemnification, and later contributed to its legislative and judicial implementation. He also represented Jewish bodies in negotiating agreements on indemnification with the Austrian authorities. (EJ 2007) . Subjects: United Nations -- Non-governmental advisory organizations. World Jewish Congress. Bright and fresh, very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-14)
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Szajkowski, Zosa
AN ILLUSTRATED SOURCEBOOK ON THE HOLOCAUST, VOLUME 1
Publishers Cloth. 4to. IX, 155 pages. 31cm. Illustrated. First edition. Volume 1. Illustrated on every page with descriptive captions. Includes indexes and bibliographical references. This collection is an unusual work. Unlike many pictorial and documentary treatments of the Holocaust, it is not a compendium of terrifying photographs of death camp horrors or of secret documents culled from the Nazi archives. Rather, it is a collection of public materials materials seen and read by the man in the street in Germany, throughout occupied Europe, and all over the world; and expressly designed by the Nazi propaganda machine and its non-German collaborators to prepare public opinion to accept Julius Streichers slogan that the Jew must disappear. As demonstrated by the reproductions gathered in this volume, this vile message was transmitted through movies, theatrical productions, exhibitions, wall posters, pamphlets newspapers, magazines, and all other public-information media. Tens of millions of people were exposed to this message day after day, and surely one imagines, they must have known about the fate of the Jews. It is hoped that this volume will serve as a reminder to the civilized world that genocide does not occur overnight. (Dust jacket) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) --Pictorial works. Antisemitism -- Germany -- Pictorial works. Light shelfwear to jacket. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-16) xxx
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Klein, Dennis B.
HIDDEN HISTORY OF THE KOVNO GHETTO
Publishers Cloth. 4to. 255 pages. 31cm. Illustrated. First edition. 285 illustrations, 75 in color. "Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto brings together unique materials from Lithuania, Israel, and the United States to present a compelling and unforgettable view of Jewish life, loss, survival, and defiance during the Holocaust. [
] This visual and documentary record is introduced by two essays that describe the German assault on Lithuania's Jewry and the Kovno Jews' resilient yet ultimately futile efforts to devise a "normal" world in the ghetto. The book concludes with a Kovno Ghetto survivor's personal reminiscence and a historian's reflection on the experience. " (Dust jacket) . Subjects: Jews -- Persecutions --Lithuania -- Kaunas -- Exhibitions. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Lithuania -- Kaunas -- Exhibitions. Light shelf wear, very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-17)
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Harran, Marilyn J
THE HOLOCAUST CHRONICLE
Publishers Cloth. 4to. 765 pages. 29 cm. Illustrated. First edition. Contains extensive photographs and maps in both color and black and white. The Holocaust Chronicle, written and fact-checked by top scholars, recounts the long, complex, anguishing story of the most terrible crime of the 20th century. A massive, oversized hardcover of more than 750 pages, The Holocaust Chronicle: A History in Words and Pictures is an excitingly unique, not for-profit endeavor that is a personal project of the publisher, Louis Weber, C. E. O. Of Chicago-based Publications International, Ltd. As a book publisher, I am in a unique position to create this ambitious project, Weber says. The son of Polish Jews who settled in America in the 1920s, Weber conceived The Holocaust Chronicle in order to give something back to the Jewish community, and to bring the truth of the Holocaust to as many people as possible. The mission of The Holocaust Chronicle is to report the facts, clearly and free of bias or agenda. Featured are more than 2000 photographs selected after intensive research in the collections of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D. C. And Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, as well as other archives and private collections located around the world. Many of these images are in full color and most are published in book form for the first time. The photographs chronicle the Holocaust in starkly visual terms, capturing victims and perpetrators alike, as well as Allied leaders and the multitude of peripheral figures. Caption-text is detailed, and rich with facts and human interest. The books 3000-item timeline of Holocaust-related events is unprecedented in its scope and ambition. Spanning the years 1000 B. C. To 1999 A. D. , the timeline pinpoints deportations, atrocities, and important developments in the Nazis Final Solution, as well as individual acts of cruelty, compassion, and heroic Jewish resistance. Illustrated chapter-opener essays place the most important years of the Holocaust and its immediate aftermath, 1933-1946, into sharp perspective. Nearly 300 sidebars detail significant people, places, issues, and events. More than 30 full-color, specially commissioned maps show the reader where events took place. The sentiments and hatreds that gave rise to the Holocaust were not confined to the 12 years of Adolf Hitlers Thousand-Year Reich. The books illustrated prologue surveys the antisemitism that was expressed over many centuries in Europe as bloody pogroms, exclusionary laws, and other persecution. The illustrated epilogue documents the long, painful healing process that has lasted for generations and may never be completed. (Publishers description) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Chronology. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Pictorial works. World War, 1939-1945 -- Chronology. World War, 1939-1945 -- Pictorial works. Holocaust. Previous owners label on front endpage. Light shelf wear to dust jacket, very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-18)
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Miles Lerman Center For The Study Of Jewish Resistance.
JEWISH RESISTANCE: A WORKING BIBLIOGRAPHY
Original Wrappers. 4to. 41 pages. 28 cm. Second printing, revised edition. To highlight the appearance of new scholarship related to Jewish resistance and to stimulate scholars to undertake additional research in this area, the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies has prepared this tool, Jewish Resistance: A Working Bibliography, on the occasion of the Museums Fourth Annual Tribute to Jewish Resistance During the Holocaust, a program of the Miles Lerman Center for the Study of Jewish Resistance. (Introduction) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Bibliography. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jewish resistance -- Bibliography. OCLC lists 3 copies of this edition worldwide. (Univ. Of Florida, Greensboro College, Concordia Univ. ) Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-20)
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University Of The State Of New York; Bureau Of Elementary Curriculum Development
TEACHING ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE, VOL 1
Original Wrappers. 8vo. Xiv, 68 pages. 22x28cm. Illustrated. First edition. Volume 1 of 2, part of The Human Rights Series. This volume has subtitle Introduction. Black and white reproductions of important documents, two maps, and a political cartoon. Contains the first two lessons titled The Roots of Intolerance and Persecution and Percursors of the Holocaust. Complete with handouts, classroom readings, and discussion topics. This teachers guide is designed to assist secondary school social studies, English and humanities teachers as they teach about the Nazi Holocaust. This guide serves as an introduction to the concept of human rights. At the same time, it aims to develop among students a reflectiveness about the significance of these events so that, ultimately, students might act with greater humanity toward one another. (iii) Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Study and teaching. Genocide -- Study and teaching. Ex-library with label on spine, no interior library markings. 1 inch closed tear to top right of front wrapper, otherwise very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-24)
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Yad Va-Shem, Rashut Ha-Zikaron La-Shoah Vela-Gevurah.
YAD VASHEM BULLETIN, NO 1-10: 1957-1961
Original Boards. 4to. Pages. 28 cm. First edition. A single volume containing numbers 1 through 10 of this newsletter, published from April, 1957 through to April, 1961. In April, 1957 another publication appeared from the authority, the Yad Vashem Bulletin, which in addition to relating information about victims, survivors, and rescuers, it also mentioned forthcoming Yad Vashem publications and documents such as the Shavli Ghetto Diary by Dr. A. Yerusalmi, and also listed publications received by the Yad Vashem library. The authority began disseminating research on the Shoah, documentation, conference anthologies, and scores of diaries and memoirs. (yadvashem.org) Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Some rubbing and light shelfwear, otherwise very good condition. (HOLO2-107-25)
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Wdowinski, David
AND WE ARE NOT SAVED
Original Boards. 8vo. 123 pages. 22 cm. Illustrated. First edition. Includes two black and white period photographs. In Commemoration of the 20th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto by one of the Leaders of the Uprising. Succinctly and powerfully recounts the experiences of the author, a founding member of the Jewish Military Union, and important witness during the trial of Nazi criminal Adolf Eichmann. (EJ 2007) Because the author was a leader of a major Jewish political party in Poland he is able to give us an understanding of the historical and social conditions that preceded the holocaust and gave it its impetus. Because he is a trained psychiatrist, we get illuminating insights into the behavior of the individuals and the masses, both heroic and inhumanly brutal, that determined the tragic destiny of the Jews throughout Europe. (Dust jacket) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Personal narratives. Wdowinski, David, 1895-1970. Warsaw (Poland) -- History -- Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, 1943. Light shelf wear to DJ. Unobtrusive label and name of previous owner on front endpage. Very good condition. (HOLO2-107-29)
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Yad Va-Shem, Rashut Ha-Zikaron La-Shoah Vela-Gevurah. ; Muzeon.
A DAY IN THE WARSAW GHETTO: A BIRTHDAY TRIP IN HELL = YOM BE-GETO VARSHAH: TIYUL YOM HULEDET BE-GEHINOM
Original Wrappers. 8vo. [34] pages. 20 x 23 cm. First edition. In English and Hebrew. Booklet for an exhibition of photographs by Heinz Jost, a hotel-keeper serving in the German Army. Contains 38 of the 129 photographs taken by Jost during an unofficial tour through the Warsaw ghetto on his birthday, April 19th, 1941. The poignant photographs are accompanied by passages from personal diaries and accounts of daily life in the ghetto. Jost kept the photographs private until the early 1980s, shortly before his death. They werent published or shown publicly until this exhibition by Yad Vashem and the Smithsonian Institute in 1988. Although Josts intention in documenting the horrors of ghetto life were never made explicit, his sentiments are related in the beginning of the booklet. I had invited some comrades to a birthday supper me [sic] that evening. I dont want to say how I felt during the meal. I lost my appetite. In my letters home I didnt say anything about what Id seen. I didnt want to upset my family. I thought, What sort of world is this? I didnt tell my army comrades anything either. Later on, too, when they burnt down the Ghetto, we didnt pay any attention. (Page [5]) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Pictorial works -- Exhibitions. Jews -- Persecutions -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Exhibitions. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Exhibitions. Documentary photography -- Exhibitions. Light staining on first 11 pages, does not affect photographs. Good + condition. (HOLO2-107-31a)
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Ryan, Michael, Ed.
HUMAN RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST: PERPETRATORS AND VICTIMS, BYSTANDERS AND RESISTERS: PAPERS OF THE 1979 BERNHARD E. OLSON SCHOLARS' CONFERENCE ON THE CHURCH STRUGGLE AND THE HOLOCAUST
Softbound. 8vo. 278 pages. [6] leaves of plates. 23 cm. Illustrated. First edition. 12 black and white photographs of Bergen Belsen taken by British forces, from the private collection of John Rowland. Volume 9 of texts and studies in religion.
the Holocaust represents not only the radical unfinished character of human becoming, but that church struggle and Holocaust studies are far from completed. In both pursuits specific new studies of a particular person or facet call for new syntheses in the attempt to arrive at a more comprehensive view. Hopefully this colume will prove to be a fruitful stimulus for such study and reflection. (Introduction) Sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Anti-Nazi movement. Library number on spine, and stamp on title page, but no other markings. Some shelfwear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-107-37)
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Sherman, B. P.
BARANOVICHSKOE GETTO; KOLDYCHEVSKII LAGER SMERTI
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 99 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Russian. A history of the Baranovichi Ghetto and the Koldychevo Camp. On the eve of the Holocaust, 12, 000 Jews lived in Baranovichi. Under Soviet rule (193941) , Jewish community organizations were disbanded and any kind of political or youth activity was forbidden. Some youth groups organized flight to Vilna, which was then part of Lithuania, and from there reached Palestine. The Hebrew Tarbut school became a Russian institution. A Jewish high school did continue to function, however. In the summer of 1940 Jewish refugees from western Poland who had found refuge in Baranovichi after September 1939 were deported to the Soviet interior. When Germans captured the city on June 27, 1941, 400 Jews were kidnapped, leaving no trace. A Judenrat was set up, headed by Joshua Izikzon. The community was forced to pay a fine of five kg. Of gold, ten kg. Of silver, and 1, 000, 000 rubles. The ghetto was fenced off from the outside on Dec. 12, 1941. The ghetto inhabitants suffered great hardship that winter, although efforts were made to alleviate the hunger. The Jewish doctors and their assistants fought to contain the epidemics. On March 4, 1942, the ghetto was surrounded. In a Selektion carried out by the Nazis to separate the "productive" from the "nonproductive", over 3, 000 elderly persons, widows, orphans, etc. , were taken to trenches prepared in advance and murdered. Resistance groups, organized in the ghetto as early as the spring of 1942, collected arms and sabotaged their places of work. Plans for rebellion were laid, but the uprising never came to pass, partly due to German subterfuge. In the second German Aktion on Sept. 22, 1942, about 3, 000 persons were murdered. On Dec. 17, 1942, another Aktion was carried out, in which more than 3, 000 persons were killed near Grabowce. Baranovichi was now declared judenrein . At the end of 1942 Jews were already fighting in groups among the partisans. A few survivors from the ghetto were still in some of the forced labor camps in the district, but most of them were liquidated in 1943. On July 8, 1944, when the city was taken by the Soviet forces, about 150 Jews reappeared from hiding in the forests. Later a few score more returned from the U. S. S. R. (EJ 2007) Koldychevo Camp (Koldyczewo) , forced labor camp in Belorussia, located 11 miles from Baranovichi, established by the Germans in late 1941. In November 1942 a crematorium was constructed in which some 600 people were incinerated. It later became an extermination camp in which Russians and Polish underground members were interned along with the Jews transferred from the surrounding ghettos of Baranovichi, Nowogrodek, Slonim , and others. Jews were separated from the other prisoners and the camp in the stables of what had once been a farm. Prior to the camp's liquidation on June 29, 1944, more than 22, 000 inmates were murdered and buried in 38 mass graves in and around the camp. A prisoner, Dr. Zelik Levinbrook, supplied medicine to the partisans with the help of a former patient. An active Jewish resistance, headed by Shlomo Kushnir, a former shoemaker, existed in Koldychevo. Its arms supply was meager: two guns, four grenades, and some acid. On the night of March 17, 1944, it succeeded in leading almost all the Jewish inmates out of the camp after killing ten Nazi guards and poisoning the guard dogs. Kushnir committed suicide when he was caught with 25 others. Seventy five prisoners survived. The rest joined the partisans in the forest. (EJ 2007) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Belarus -- Baranavichy. Jewish ghettos -- Belarus -- Baranavichy. Concentration camps -- Belarus -- Koldychevo. World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities. Condition. (HOLO2-107-39)
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Greybrook, Alfred A. ; Claire L. Greybrook
MEMOIRS OF ALFRED A. GREYBROOK AND CLAIRE L. GREYBROOK [MANUSCRIPT]
Plastic binder. 4to. 2, [1], 105 pages. Cm. Photocopy typescript. Manuscript of memoirs from 1938 through 1940 by Alfred and Claire Greybrook. Throughout these memoirs, Alfred recounts his time as a prisoner at Sachsenhausen, his subsequent release and immigration to Australia. Claire writes about her struggle obtaining immigration papers, the care of her family and many friends, and the harrowing voyage to Australia through mine infested waters. Years ago I completed our Memoirs 1938/1940 in the German language. However after I left the Griesbach-Greybrook Family Tree to future generations, I would like that for all times it may be known WHY, WHEN and from WHERE our family came to Australia. There are so many Australians of German Descent, who know practically nothing about their forefathers. So I translated the Memoirs from German into English to the best of my ability. It is my ardent desire that this book and the Family Tree from generation to generation will always be passed on to the eldest son of the Greybrook family. (Foreward) Subjects: Concentration camp inmates -- Germany -- Sachsenhausen (Brandenburg) Deportation -- Germany. Holocaust survivors -- United States. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives. Jews, Polish -- Persecutions -- Germany. Kristallnacht, 1938. World War, 1939-1945 -- Deportations from Poland. No copies listed on OCLC. Bright and fresh. Bound in manuscript binder that has some shelfwear. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-40) xxxxxx
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Jewish Occupational Council
VOLUME OF ACTIVITIES: JEWISH EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES: ANNUAL STATISTICAL REPORT 1942: TOGETHER WITH AN ANALYSIS OF THE ACTIVE FILE
Original Wrappers. 4to. [28] pages. 26 cm. First edition. Report analyzing jobseekers and rates of employment using information compiled from eighteen participating Jewish employment agencies in the United States and Canada. Includes 22 tables detailing statistics regarding Jewish jobseekers and employment in 1942. The International Association of Jewish Vocational Services (IAJVS) was founded in 1939 as the Jewish Occupational Service. The original focus was employment services for WWII veterans and later included assistance for persecuted Jewish immigrants. The IAJVS has expanded its programs to include educational, rehabilitation, and home/community based services. (American Jewish Archives) Subjects: Jews -- United States -- Economic conditions -- Congresses. Jews -- Employment -- United States -- Congresses. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Spine rebacked. Some light age toning. Small library stamp on inside cover, with no other library markings. Some chipping to front wrapper, otherwise very good condition. Rare. (HOLO2-109-5)
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Jewish Agency For Israel.
STATISTICAL TABLES ON THE DISTRIBUTION, MIGRATION AND NATURAL INCREASE OF THE JEWS IN THE WORLD: WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO JEWISH ACTIVITIES IN PALESTINE
Original Wrappers, inside period folder. 4to. 12 pages. 27cm. First edition. Errata slip pasted in on page 11. 15 tables detailing statistics of Jewish population distribution, migration and agricultural output. Presumably an accompanying piece to the memorandum submitted by the Jewish Agency for Palestine recommending the resettlement of Jewish refugees in the British Mandate of Palestine. Subjects: Evian Conference (1938) . Demography -- Jews. Jews -- Statistics. OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide. (Brandeis, Johns Hopkins, Ohio State, Hebrew Univ. , Kinneret, Natl. Libr. Of Israel, Tel Aviv Univ. , Ben Gurion Univ. , Univ. Of Haifa. ) , none in New York. Spine rebacked, and loose inside stiff paper period folder. Small library stamps on front and inside of front wrapper. Previous reinforcement and repairs done to covers. Wrappers missing top and bottom fore edge cover corners. Externally fair. Internally, text and pages in very good condition. (HOLO2-109-10)
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Ganin, Zvi
THE JEWISH RESPONSE TO ANTI-SEMITISM IN THE CONTEXT OF INTERGROUP RELATIONS IN BOSTON AND NEW YORK CITY, 1938-1948
Spiral bound leaves, xerographic production as issued. 4to. Ii, 117pages. 28 cm. First edition. Presented to Dr. Nathan M. Kaganoff April, 1971. A detailed examination of the response of Jewish communities in New York City and Boston to overt and increasingly politicized antisemitism during the late 1930s through the 1940s. This study begins by describing the incidents of overt anti-Semitism in two specific places at a particular time, and by investigating the Jewish response to them. This is followed by evaluation of the role of public opinion within the Boston and New York Jewish communities and that of the non-Jewish press in pressuring Mayor LA Guardia of New York City and Governor Saltonstall of Massachusetts to take action against the assaults on Jewish children. (Introduction) Zvi Ganin is the author of Truman, American Jewry, and Israel, 1945-1949, and Kiryat Hayyim: Experiment in an Urban Utopia (in Hebrew) and has written extensively on American Jewish and Israeli history. He lives in Israel. (Syracuse University Press) Subjects: Antisemitism. Jews New York. Jews Boston. American Jewish Congress. American Jewish Committee. Anti-Defamation League. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide. (Natl. Libr. Of Israel) Spiral binding, with two small library labels. Very light shelf wear. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-12) Xxxxx
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Gutterman, Lester
STATEMENT ON AMERICAN IMMIGRATION POLICY: PRESENTED TO THE PRESIDENTS SPECIAL COMMISSION ON IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION
Hole punched in period folder. 4to. 23 pages. 27 cm. First edition. DP-era statement from the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation league presented by Lester Gutterman recommending the lifting of immigration quotas, reform of laws regarding naturalization and a condemnation of the McCarran Act. The Presidential Commission on Immigration and Naturalization followed closely after Trumans veto of the Internal Security Act, a controversial piece of legislation requiring government registration of Communist organizations and limitations to immigration (also known as the McCarran Act) was overridden by Congress in 1950. Subjects: Jews Immigration. Presidential commission. American Jewish Committee. Anti-Defamation League. McCarran Act. No copies listed on OCLC. Light age toning. Small library stamp on title page verso. Library call numbers on folder cover. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-14)
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Jewish Occupational Council
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE ACTIVITIES OF JEWISH EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES: ANNUAL STATISTICAL REPORT 1941: TOGETHER WITH AN ANALYSIS OF THE ACTIVE FILE
Original Wrappers, hole punched in period folder. 4to. 13, [23] pages. 26 cm. First edition. Holocaust-era report analyzing employment agencies using information compiled participating Jewish employment agencies in the United States and Canada. Includes 26 tables and graphs detailing statistics regarding Jewish jobseekers, placement for agency applicants, and employment in 1941. The International Association of Jewish Vocational Services (IAJVS) was founded in 1939 as the Jewish Occupational Service. The original focus was employment services for WWII veterans and later included assistance for persecuted Jewish immigrants. The IAJVS has expanded its programs to include educational, rehabilitation, and home/community based services. (American Jewish Archives) Subjects: Jews -- United States -- Economic conditions -- Congresses. Jews -- Employment -- United States -- Congresses. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Some light age toning. Small library stamp on inside cover, with no other library markings. Front wrapper repaired, otherwise very good condition. (HOLO2-109-16)
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Memorial Foundation For Jewish Culture
MEETING: SPONSORED BY THE MEMORIAL FOUNDATION FOR JEWISH CULTURE
Original wrappers, hole punched in period folder. 4to. 155 pages. 28cm. First edition. Single-sided photo copied pages. First draft of the minutes for the meeting regarding the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture held on March 27th, 1966. Includes a separate single leaf memorandum addressed to The Participants in the March 27th Gathering of Scholars. The memorandum states: Enclosed is a transcription of the discussion which took place during the above-mentioned meeting. The document, distributed to participants for corrections, is a preparatory discussion including the proposed goals, constitution and organizational structure of the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture. The Memorial Foundation was established with German reparations funds by Nahum Goldmann in 1965 with the mandate to raise up a new generation of scholars, intellectuals, rabbis, and cultural and communal leaders to replace the Jewish cultural elite annihilated in Europe during the Shoah. (EJ 2007) Subjects: Jews -- Intellectual life. Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture. Restoration. No copies listed on OCLC. Light shelf wear, text bright and fresh. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-19)
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Jewish Occupational Council
REPORTS OF THE JEWISH OCCUPATIONAL COUNCIL: NO. 2, 3, 5, 6.
Original Wrappers. 8vo. Pages. 26 cm. First edition. Four reports printed for public circulation. Reports are titled, Some Aspects of the Jewish Economic Problem, A Bibliography for Jewish Vocational Agencies, A Guide to General Vocational Services, and Patterns of Jewish Occupational Distribution in the United States and Canada. Note laid in to Report No. 2 reading, This printed edition of Some Aspects of the Jewish Economic Problem differs slightly from the mimeographed edition issued in 1939. Aside from minor revisions, there is new material in the section headed Conclusion on page 10. Most of the changes are based on reaction by readers of the earlier edition. Additional copies are available upon request. The Jewish Occupational Council established in 1939 in New York as a national advisory and coordinating agency for Jewish organizations and communities in the U. S. And Canada engaged in educational and vocational programs and job placement. (yivoarchives.org) The organization is now called the International Association of Jewish Vocational Services. Subjects: Occupations -- Choice -- Jews. Jews -- United States -- Charities. Employment agencies, bureaus, etc. -- Jews. Spines rebacked. Some shelf wear. Light library markings. Very good condition. (HOLO2-109-21)
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