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Softcover. 292pages. 20cm. First edition. In Spanish. At 20: 25, the lady entered immortality, is a work of fiction by the Buenos Aires born writer Mario Szichman, who currently resides in the United States. This work is the fourth and final novel of his representing the fictional Pechof family, immigrants from Poland to Argentina. Premio Norte, 1980 (North Award, 1980) embossed in gold on cover. Subjects: Spanish Fiction. Very lightly soiled covers and edges. Very good condition. (LATAM1-27)
201288524Jerusalem u. New York, Gefen, (2012). X, 309 S., mit Abb. im Text. Gr.-8vo. 25 cm. Illustr. OPp. mit gleichartigem SU (dieser etwas berieben u. angerändert).
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
8vo. 58 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Jews education United States. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide (Hebrew Union College) . Front cover detached, good condition. (BIB-5-31)
200011005ABBoston/New York, Houghton Mifflin Comp., 2000. XV/557 S. Broschiert, Deckelillustr., sehr guter Zust.
Very Good Hardback. VG Dust Jacket. Apparently signed by the author with dedication on front end paper. Clean copy. xiv + 366p
12mo. Xii, 373 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - Netherlands - Amsterdam; Jews - Great Britain; Manasseh ben Israel, 1604-1657. Ex library with usual markings, good condition. (SEF-9-22) xxxx
Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1962. Cloth. 8vo. 200 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - History - To 70 A. D. Gilt lettering on cover and spine. In Very Good condition. (SEF-8-17A) .
Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1962. Cloth. 8vo. 200 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - History - To 70 A. D. Gilt lettering on cover and spine. Ex-library with minimal markings and withdrawn stamps. In Very Good condition. (SEF-8-17) .
Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1962. Cloth. 8vo. 200 pages. SUBJECT (S) : Jews - History - To 70 A. D. Gilt lettering on cover and spine. Ex-Library with minimal markings. In Very Good condition. (SEF-8-17B) .
IN HEBREW WITH FEW ENGLISH ESSAYS. 24.5x17.5 cm. 60+282 pages. Hardcover with dust jacket. In good condition.
A very good paperback with lightly rubbed wraps. Clean, tight, unmarked. ...
Paper wrappers, 16mo. , 190 pages. In Hebrew and English. List of scholarly writings by members of the Hebrew University, many are German Jewish exiles, refugees, and survivors. Edges worn and corner creased, otherwise very good condition. (BIB-7-31)
8vo. Xi, 340 pages. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Covenants religious aspects Judaism history of doctrines; Prayer Judaism; Judaism essence, genius, nature. CONTENTS: Fundamentals of a covenental anthropology; Assertion versus submission: the tension within Judaism; Halakhic Man: Soloveitchik's synthesis; Ethics and halakhah; Human beings in the presence of God; The spirit of Judaic prayer; Individual and community in prayer; Rabbinic responses to suffering; The rabbinic renewal of the covenant; Two competing covenantal paradigms; The celebration of finitude; The third Jewish commonwealth. ISBN: 0029141400. Born in the United States in 1931 to parents who had immigrated from Jerusalem, Hartman studied at the Lakewood yeshiva, Yeshiva University, and Fordham University. In 1971 he emigrated to Israel, which had religioustheological significance to him, as he thought that Jews could only live fully as Jews in Israel and that establishing the Jewish state was the culmination of the historic covenant at Sinai. Hartman's entire approach to Judaism revolves around synthesizing historical traditions with the present situations of Jews. To this end he established the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, has trained teachers, worked with senior officers in the Israel Defense Forces, and continues with Jewish endeavors in Israel and internationally. (EJ, 2007) Ex library, otherwise good condition. (RAB-28-10)
2007167212W W Norton & Co Inc, 2007. Gebundene Ausgabe
29.5x23 cm. 39+105 pages. Soft cover. Cover is slightly wrinkled. Else in good condition.
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 192 pages. 25 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Finely printed edition of Yiddish poetry, with decorative brown ink device in the page margins, and authors portrait as frontispiece. With backpage English handwritten dedication from the author: To a potential bolshevik / George Siegel / from the author / Sept 1930. The poet Moyshe Nadir was the pseudonym chosen by the American Yiddish writer Isaac Reiss, born in Galicia in 1885. He arrived in America at the age of 13, and within a few years was writing poems, drama reviews, and satires for leading Yiddish journals. The pseudonym Nadir (na dir, as in take this or take this and choke on it) embodies some of the daring, acid humor of his work in leftist Yiddish publications the Frayhayt, Hamer, and Signal during the 1920s and 30s. (Joel Schechter, In a Moyshenadirish World, Jewish Currents summer 2010) . Farlag Matones was founded by the Sholem Aleichem Folk Institute, an organization established in New York in 1918 to coordinate a secular Yiddish school system. .... [and] as a publisher of childrens books but became a leading publisher of Yiddish literature and of well-known authors such as Menahem Boraisha, Jacob Glatstein, Chaim Grade, Moses (Moyshe) Leib Halpern, Leibush Lehrer, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Hillel Zeitlin, Aaron Zeitlin (Guide to the Yivo Archives, 2012) . Subjects: Yiddish poetry. OCLC lists 30 copies. Light chipping to edges of backstrip, light wear and ageing to edges, clean and fresh. Very good + condition. (YIDCHI-6-11)
1st edition. Period Boards with original wrappers bound in, 8vo, 40 pages ; 24 cm. In Hungarian. Includes bibliographical references. We assume this to be the same Miksa Weisz who was a teacher at the Hungarian Jewish Teacher Training Institute. Referencing Pal Weisz article on the recently deceased Miksa Weisz, a pedagogue at the Hungarian Jewish Teacher Training Institute, Laczó Ferenc suggests that Pal Weisz celaerly asserted the primacy of Miksa Weiszs Jewishness, presenting him not only as a Jew faithful to traditions, but also as a dedicated conservative who was very angry at the imitation of foreign habits and hurt bu the lack of Nachwuchs of traditional Jewry. Moreover, Pal Weisz emphasized that Miksa Weisz demanded Jewish sef-respect and was furious when others questned that Jewish constituted a people. At the very same time, in Pal Weiszs interpretation, Miksa Weisz was also an enthusiastic Hungarian in favor of religious freedom. In the end such references to Miksa Weiszs supposed liberalism and Hungarian sentiments werw rather incongruent parts of his portrait (in Hungarian Jews in the Age of Genocide: An Intellectual History, 19291948, p 30) . SUBJECT(S) : ? Im? Ah, mi-Vi? Ri, -1105. Mahazor Vitri -- History and criticism. OCLC lists 5 libraries with holdings (JTS, Harvard, NLI, UCLA, HUC) . OCLC: 79407869. Ex-library, old dampstains, board slightly warped, original wrappers now somewhat brittle, but text paper remains supple though toned and wavy in places. About Good- Condition. (RAB-62-23)
Original Cloth. 4to. 1, 590 pages. 28 cm. First Hungarian edition. Edited by Randolph Braham. Housed in illustrated box. Three volume set: 1. Ko¨t. Abau´j-Torna va´rmeyge-Ma´rmaros va´rmegyge - 2. Ko¨t. Maros-Torda va´rmeyge-Zemple´n va´rmegye - 3. Ko¨t. Fu¨ggele´k. The illustrated three-volume Geographical Encyclopedia of the Holocaust in Hungary is a magisterial resource, thorough and exhaustive, chronicling the wartime fate of the Jewish communities in that country where virulent antisemitism is anything but dead, even today. With scores of detailed maps and hundreds of photographs, this reference work is organized alphabetically by county, each prefaced with a map and a contextual history describing its Jewish population up to and into 1944. Entries track the demographic, cultural, and religious changes in even the smallest communities where Jews lived before their marginalization, dispossession, ghettoization, and, finally, deportation to labor and death camps. The encyclope¬dia endows scholars and lay researchers with both panoramic and microscopic views of the virtually last-minute destruction of most of the Jews of Hungary, until then the last sizable surviving Jewish community in occupied Europe. - USHMM. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Jews - Persecutions - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Antisemitism - Hungary - Encyclopedias. Judenvernichtung. Antisemitism. Jews - Persecutions. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC lists 17 copies. Brand new in publishers plastic. Very good + condition. (BRAHAM-1-45) xx
Hardback. 8vo. 1, 480 pages. 25 cm. First edition. In Hungarian. Contains 5, 573 items on the Holocaust in Hungary. Edited by Randolph L. Braham. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary - Bibliography. Jews - Hungary - History - 20th century - Bibliography. World War, 1939-1945 - Jews - Hungary - Bibliography. Antisemitism - Hungary - History - 20th century - Bibliography. OCLC lists 13 copies. Brand new, wrapped in plastic from publisher. Very good + condition. (BRAHAM-1-26) xx
340x470 mm. Unpaginated. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Jacket stained and slightly worn. Cover edges and corners worn. Spine edges worn. Pages bottom edge slightly stained. Else in good condition.
274 p. 8vo. Original full blue paper covered boards, silvered letter spine. Original dust jacket, slightly stained. Hardbound. Translated by Yael Guiladi. JUDAICA BOX 4
197047226ABJerusalem, Keter, 1970. 274 S. Orig.-Pappband mit Orig.-Umschlag.
Third edition. Carefully revised, corrected, and improved. Original board with paper label on front, as issued, 8vo, 83 pages ; 22 cm. In English with Hebrew. Singerman 1263. Goldman (183), notes, Joshua Seixas, the son of Gershom Mendes Seixas (the minister of New York's Shearith Israel congregation), was born in New York in 1802. Little is known about his life. He taught in Shearith Israel's Hebrew school in the mid-1820s and he established the congregation's first choir. Seixas moved to Charlestown, MA, in the early 1830s and gave lessons in Hebrew. Among his pupils were Harvard students. Seixas began referring to himself as James while in Charlestown and it is assumed that he converted to Unitarian Christianity while there. Seixas then settled in Hudson, OH. He offered private Hebrew classes to students at Oberlin College, and later at Western Reserve University...He also taught groups of Mormons- the center of the movement at the time was in Kirtland, OH- and among his students were Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, and Orson Hyde, another early leader of the movement. Seixas left Ohio in 1836 and he was living in Staten Island, NY, by 1838. It is not clear what his relationship to the Jewish community was in his later years. His death in 1874 is not mentioned in Shearith Israel's records, but the death of his wife is. (The two lived apart after retuning to New York.) Also, a few of his many children remained within the community; others did not. Seixas was in regular contact with Christian Hebraists throughout his life. He corresponded with Moses Stuart on personal and scholarly matters and he proofread the grammars published by Stuart and George Bush. Seixas himself authored grammars for Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac and Arabic .An expanded second edition (119 pp.) was published in 1834 UA #590]; a third revised and corrected edition (83 pp.) was published in 1852 UA #1263]. Seixas's grammar was reviewed favorably in its time (Goldman, 'Joshua/James Seixas," 72), though Chomsky later criticized it (Chomsky [1958], 133-4). For detailed analysis of Seixas' relationship with the founders of the Mormon church, see Rick Grunder's 2015 essay "A Teacher for the Temple: The Infectious Exuberance of Joshua Seixas" (www.rickgrunder.com/seixas.pdf). Interesting assortment of period ownership inscriptions including Jackson Coffing; A.J. Sem, NY City Nov 21st 1853; and Geo Wilson Lemert (?), From his sister Josephine, Antioch Apr. 24th 1869. SUBJECT(S): Hebrew language -- Grammar. OCLC: 4821518. OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Lacks backstrip. Dampstains throughout, original boards show moisture damage as well, but book is solid. In fitted buckram archival clamshell box (AMR-65-31)