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1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 518 + 96 pages. In Hebrew and Yiddish with an English section. Eight years have gone by since we first began preparations for this book on the Jewish community of Rozhan, until at long last it can be published now. It was a great effort made by a number of people devoted to the weighty and difficult task to erect a fitting memorial to our community. It is what other communities of Israel have done and no doubt it is the right thing to do for the people of the book. Rozhan was no different from other Jewish townships in Poland that are no more, but to us, who were born and grew up there, she has something unique. It is not only the landscape, the topographic situation on the high bank of the River Narew. It was also the Jews, who had been living at the place for generations, rebuilding it stubbornly and assiduously many times. In fact after each of the many wars that swept over the region, that lies on the road from Russia to Warsaw. Those were homely Jews of all social strata, orthodox and freethinkers, Zionists and anti-Zionists. Above all we have at heart the Jewish youth of Rozhan that took upon itself the task to redeem the world and the nation - and only few of them have reached the final haven of rest here in Israel, while others, of the few who did survive, have found shelter in the West and built their homes there. It is the intention of this book to keep our past alive and to preserve the shining memory of those who lived and were active there, to show that they were not anonymous and to describe their striving and struggling to maintain a definitely Jewish, religious, social and political existence. This book wants to tell future generations how the Jews of Rozhan created Jewish life in the midst of a hostile environment, how they built for themselves the framework of a society and filled it with deep-rooted national values, how they created their own institutions, that were able impose their authority - after democratically arrived at decisions with no governmental powers behind them. The book also wants to keep alive the old Jewish spirit maintained by our people everywhere, the rule Jews stand by each other that found its expression in individual help as well as in organized assistance such as various mutual funds. The book is also meant as a memorial to the tragedy of our people. Jews of Rozhan had to run for their lives during the very first days of the war, and one after the other they fell as victims on the bloodstained roads of Poland. Some survived after having passed through the hell of exile in the vastness of Russia and Siberia and back; only a few were lucky enough to reach Israel and to build new homes here. The book contains about 600 pages and it reflects a collective effort. It was not easy to obtain the material, as there are next to no writers among our people. So we had to apply to as many of our townsfolk as possible in order to make them talk or write - those who did write were a minority and most contributions were given orally and had to be taken down. We endeavoured to get in touch with as many as possible and to give a rounded out picture of the town, its history, people and folklore, but we feel that in spite of all our efforts we could not note everything worth remembering. All we can say is that we have done our best to present a many-sided picture of everything that was human and Jewish and good. (from English preface) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Ro´z? An -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations.
Cloth in Dustjacket, 4to, 430 pages, in Hebrew, Includes Illustrations, maps, Title on title page verso: Lithuanian Jewry, Published by The Association of The Lithuanian Jews in Israel. Contents of VOl II: kerekh 2. Ha-Yehudim be-Lita me-1918 ? Ad 1941. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Lithuania. OCLC lists 67 copies worldwide. Light edge wear to DJ and corners, overall very good condition. (HOLO2-98-19)
Publisher's cloth, 4to, 430 pages, in Hebrew, Includes Illustrations, maps, Title on title page verso: Lithuanian Jewry, Published by The Association of The Lithuanian Jews in Israel. Contents of VOl II: kerekh 2. Ha-Yehudim be-Lita me-1918 ? Ad 1941. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Lithuania. OCLC lists 67 copies worldwide. Moderate wear to cloth, light edge wear to corners, minor wormholing to margins, map taped, slight boxing, overall very clean and fresh, good condition. (HOLO2-98-19A)
Original Wraps. 12mo. 159 pages. 20 cm. First edition. Conference material of the International Conference on Prosecution of Nazi Criminals, held March 25-28, 1969. Issued also in Russian: Osnovnye materialy. Conference participants included ministers of justice from the Eastern Bloc and prominent legal theorists, scholars, and lawyers from several countries in Western Europe (Czeslaw Pilichowski, D. N. Pritt, etc. ) . The materials address precedent trials (Nuremberg, etc. ) and the ongoing legal ramifications and need for further prosecution of Nazi war criminals still at large, or currently not facing prosecution, in West Germany and other countries in the world. Scholars address the legal statutes and ways of addressing further and recent trials of Nazi war criminals in their respective countries (Belgium, France, etc. ) . Subjects: War crimes - Congresses. War criminals - Congresses. World War, 1939-1945 - Atrocities. Atrocities. War crimes. War criminals. World War (1939-1945) Conference proceedings. OCLC lists 28 copies. Wraps bumped, edges lightly bumped, otherwise clean and fresh. Good condition. (HOLO2-123-53)
(FT) Hardcover, 98, vi pages, 8vo, 25 cm. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Judaism -- Customs and practices. Marti, Ramon, d. Ca. 1286. Pugio fidei. Includes bibliographical references and index. Other Titles: Shkiin "A few words on some Jewish legends, customs and literary sources found in Karaite and Christian works (including an index of the Jewish books cited in Pugio Fidei of Raymund Martini) ". OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Ex-library. Chipping to edges of jacket. Otherwise, very good condition in the scarce dust jacket. A beautiful copy (Holo2-19-53)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 2 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. This article, presenting the standpoint of one individual is published because it presents a point of view which is of unusual significance at this juncture. Mr. Montors stand has the support of many leaders in this country and is as fervently opposed by other outstanding personalities. Joseph Brainin, who disagrees with many of the arguments advanced by Henry Montor, will answer this article in our next issue. Leaders [sic] are invited to express their reaction to this interesting debate. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets and some light blurring of type, but all text is legible. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-28)
No Date (1937). 1st edition. Original Wrappers; 8vo. 58 pages. Dutch Antifascist pamphlet. E. D. D. -Serie. No. 4. Second edition. In Dutch. Contains much material on anti-Semitism. "Facts and data concerning the goals of the N. S. B. Collected by the press service of the Dutch movement for Unity and Democracy. " Very good condition. (H-35-7)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 40 pages. In German. Title translates to English as: Youth at Risk. Nazi-era publication warning of the degeneracy of youth brought about by the disintegration of society and reflecting the fear that Germany and German culture were on the brink of disaster. OCLC lists 6 libraries worldwide. Front cover detached, but included, with small stains, darkening and ripping on some corners. Lacks backstrip. Pages have some darkening but text is clear and internal binding is in tight. Good condition with gorgeous period cover. Scarce. (HOLO2-29-20)
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 166 pages. 21 cm. First Edition. In Ukrainian. "Although his first poems were written in 1916, Osmachka began his literary career while he was a student at the Kyiv Institute of People's Education from 1920 to 1923. He belonged to the literary organizations Aspys and Lanka [Later known as 'Maisternia Revoliutsiinoho Slovaâ' (Workshop of the Revolutionary Word) or MARS] and published his first collection of poetry, Krucha (The Precipice) , in 1922; it was followed by two more collections, Skytski vohni (The Scythian Fires, 1925) and Klekit ([Crane's] Clacking, 1929) . Like other members of MARS he was attacked and arrested for his 'unpolitical' literary works, but managed to save himself from execution by feigning insanity. During the 1930s he faced constant persecution by the authorities and was unable to publish any works. During the Second World War he fled to Western Ukraine, then to displaced persons camps in Germany, and finally to the United States. Osmachka's personal ordeal had lasting effects on him, and until his death he suffered from a persecution complex. Nonetheless he resumed his literary career in 1943 in Lviv with the publication of his fourth collection of poetry, Suchasnykam (To My Contemporaries) . In the displaced persons camps, where he was a member of the MUR literary organization, he published his epic poem, written in octaves, Poet (Poet, 1946) , as well as his first prose work, Starshyi Boiaryn (The Best Man, 1946)." (Encyclopedia of Ukraine. ) Subjects: Ukraine; Fiction; Short Stories. OCLC lists 2 copies worldwide. (Cleveland Pub. Libr. , Toronto Pub. Libr. ) Light age toning and edgewear. Very good contion. Scarce and important (UKR-1-29)xx
1st edition. Original cloth with dust jacket. 4to, 316 + 48 pages. Illustrations throughout. Hebrew with English section in back. In our present research we are interested in the Jewish settlement in Vishogrod, its beginnings, its roots, its social image up from the beginning, its transformations until assuming Hassidism as its main aspect, and also in the period of revival before the destruction.
st edition. Original boards with gilt lettering. 8vo. 304 pages. 24cm. Decorative inscription from Sutskever, the subject of the book. It is written in Yiddish and spirals off into a drawing self portrait. In Hebrew and Yiddish. Title translates to The Lineage of a Song: In Honor of Avraham Sutskever. A commemorative book for Abraham Sutzkever on his seventieth birthday. Sutzkever was an acclaimed Yiddish poet who the NY Times referred to as the greatest poet of the Holocaust. (Wikipedia, 2018) . Edited by Dov Sadan (1902-1989) who was an Israeli literary critic and politician who served as a member of the Knesset. He was awarded the Israel Prize for Jewish Studies and the Bialik Prize for Literature. (Wikipedia, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Sutzkever, Abraham, 1913-2010 -- Criticism and interpretation. OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide (Royal Danish Lib. , NYBC, Haifa, Hebrew U. ) . A beautiful copy. Very Good Condition. (YID-30-24)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 2 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. Recently there was a published novel, The Spectacle of a Man, written by a New York physician under the pseydonym [sic] of John Coignard. Mr. Coignard has definite views on how to cure the Jews so as to kill anti-Semitism. In this interview he presents his views, which in many respects have a rather humorous though not always intentionally so aspect. Read it think it over and smile, if you feel like it. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets and some wear to edges, but all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-29)
Paper-wrappers, 8vo, 87 pages, Submitted to the National Council, 4 copies on OCLC, Ex-library copy, some shelf wear, otherwise very good condition (HOLO2-98-20)
1st Bergen-Belsen edition. Original boards with gilt lettering. 8vo. 160 pages. 21 cm. In Hebrew. Title translates to Teachings of the School of Elijah. This edition was reprinted from the Warsaw, 1874 edition printed by Yitzhak Goldman. Bergen-Belsen was the largest displaced persons (DP) camp in Germany and was the center of Jewish DP political and social activity in the British zone of occupation. The camp was established in July 1945 near the concentration camp after the British burned the camp barracks during liberation. In 1946, the DP camp housed over 11, 000 Jews. Survivors of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp organized political, cultural, and religious activities just weeks after liberation. The DPs of Bergen-Belsen also created and maintained a lively cultural life and published Unzer Shtimme (Our Voice) , the main Jewish newspaper of the British zone. By the middle of 1950, the camp was nearly empty; the last DPs left in August 1951. The majority of Bergen-Belsen's DPs emigrated to Israel. Many others went to the United States and Canada (USHMM, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Displaced Persons. OCLC lists 5 copies online, three of which are in Israel and two of which are in Germany. Binding is starting. Pages are browning, but in very good condition with very few tears to the first few pages. Some edge wear to boards. Overall in Good Condition. (RAB-64-10)xx
10, [20], 9 pages. Illustrated. In English. Series: Guides and catalogues Yivo Archives ; ; 1. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Persecutions -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. Warsaw (Poland) -- Ethnic relations -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. In good condition (HOLO2-10-20)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 3 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. While the world stands aghast at the ferocity of the renewed anti-Jewish terror in Germany, decent men and women everywhere, revolted by sadism and brutality, are asking why this Medievalism, why this needless cruelty? Mr. Zukerman provides the answer in this startling analysis of the financial side of official anti-Semitism. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets, but all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-25)
1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 806 pages, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish with a Spanish title page. German soldiers first passed through Ratne at the end of June 1941, but Nazi rule was established in the town only in July. Between the retreat of the Soviets and the arrival of German security forces and administrators, locals plundered Jewish homes and businesses. Shortly after the Germans arrived, they shot 27 Jews and 30 Soviet prisoners of war. Acting through the Ukrainian police, they also introduced an array of anti-Jewish measures: Jews had to wear identifying armbands (later yellow patches) , comply with a curfew, hand in valuables, including ritual objects, and provide forced labor. It was forbidden for Jews to speak to Ukrainians. As early as July 1941, Jews from the countryside were already being relocated to Ratne. In the spring of 1942, a ghetto was set up there. After a partisan raid on Ratne in June 1942, the Germans shot more than 110 Jews, along with a few Ukrainians. The Destruction of the Jewish Community. In August, the Germans recruited Ukrainian peasants from Prokhid to dig pits at a nearby sand lot. On August 26, the ghetto was liquidated by a unit from the Gestapo outpost in Brest supported by the local German Gendarmerie post and Ukrainian auxiliary police force. Although several hundred Jews fled before they could be taken to Prokhid. Many others hid in the ghetto. Most were eventually caught and murdered as well. Between 1, 300 and 1, 500 Jewish men, women, and children were killed during this operation. A few dozen skilled laborers were left alive and employed in a workshop. They were shot in February 1943. (protecting-memory.org 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Ukraine -- Ratne. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Ratno (Ukraine) -- Ethnic relations. OCLC: 38702086. Light wear on cover and spine, page edges yellowed, previous owners name and imprint on front end page. Good Condition Overall. Inscription on Spanish title page. (YIZ-19-16A)
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 94 pages. 22 cm. Series: Jewish Life in America, Number Three. CONTENTS: Characteristics of the Jewish Settlement --- The Pre-Historic Period --- The New Immigration [refugees & survivors] --- Economic Development --- Culture and Press --- Jews and Cubans --- Organizing the Community. Translated from Spanish by Simon Wolin. Covers lightly worn with small chip to one corner; internal pages are nice and clean. Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-101-19)
420 pages. Index. "As Douglas Reed, living in the Vienna he loved, was writing this book in 1937 and the early part of 1938, history seemed to be marching at its normal pace... the destruction of Austria was only a fear in the hearts of a few informed men. No sooner was the manuscript dispatched to the publisher, however, than the storm broke and the map of Europe began to change... The first forty-four chapters have been allowed to stand as they were written before Hitler's march into Austria... Fortunately, it has been possible to conclude the story of Austria in the last four chapters, which were written just after Hitler's arrival in Vienna on March 15th, when the author was forced to flee for his life to Zurich." - from Publisher's Note. Above-average external wear and soiling. Unmarked. Some yellowing to contents. Binding intact. A sound working copy. [Singerman 450] Book
DENOEL.. 1941. In-8 Carré. Broché. Etat d'usage. Couv. légèrement passée. Dos plié. Intérieur acceptable. 409 pages. Frontispice en noir et blanc. Note au stylo sur la page de faux titre.
8vo., First English Edition, with portrait frontispiece, 5 plates on 4 and a full-page pedigree in the text, neat contemporary inscription on front free endpaper, free endpapers very lightly spotted; original black cloth, backstrip lettered in silver, a very good, bright, clean copy in dustwrapper, the latter crisp, unrubbed, and lightly age-soiled on (predominantly white) rear panel. Still the best detailed account, providing a balanced assessment of the numerous myths and disinformation promulgated in Mein Kampf and elsewhere. Very scarce, especially in this condition.
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. 826 columns, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish, foreword also in English. This book describes the city of Suwalk, Poland and the surrounding communities. Many black and white photographs are included, along with reproductions of important documents. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Suwalki -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 11558550, OCLC lists 29 copies worldwide. Some wear on corners, some marks on page edges, spine replaced, very good internally, Good Condition overall. (YIZ-19-12)
8vo; 214 pages; Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. xv, 214 pages. 23 cm. In Polish. Documents of Crimes and Martyrdom. Includes 2-page names-index & 4-page bibliography. SUBJECT(S):World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, German. Jews -- Poland. Picture cover and many facsimiles. Front cover is slightly worn with closed tear and some tape along spine. Otherwise a nice, clean copy in good+ condition. (HOLO2-62-10)
(FT) Original Wrappers. 12mo. 79 pages. 17 cm. Undated edition. In Yiddish. Song of the Murdered Jewish People" by Itzhak Katzenelson (18851944) , a Hebrew and Yiddish poet. Katzenelsons world fell apart when in August 1942 his wife Hanna and two younger sons, Ben-Tsiyon and Binyamin, were deported to Treblinka. From then on, his literary creativity was piercingly shaped by lamentations over the loss of his family. Nonetheless, with his oldest son, Tsevi, he found the strength to join the Jewish Fighting Organization and took part in the first uprising of January 1943. After the ghetto was destroyed in April and May 1943, he escaped to the Aryan section of Warsaw and obtained a Honduran identity document. Nevertheless, he was sent to a German detention camp for foreign subjects in Vittel, France. He was imprisoned there until April 1944, and devoted most of his time to writing. Two important works were produced during that period: Pinkas Vitel (The Vittel Diary) , a Hebrew composition that uses the language of an incensed diarist and reconstructs the days of terror in Warsaw during the mass deportations; and Dos lid fun oysgehargetn yidishn folk (The Poem about the Murdered Jewish People) , a pathos-filled Yiddish poem that laments the destruction of the Jewish people and of the poet himself, who has been become bitterly angry with humankind and God. These two works are among the boldest and most lofty literary expressions to emerge from the Holocaust. All of Katzenelsons works from his Vittel period were either buried in hiding places or were given to people he trusted; consequently, they were saved and published shortly after the end of the war. In the middle of April 1944, Katzenelson and his son Tsevi were sent to the Drancy transit camp, and from there one month later to Auschwitz, where they were murdered. In 1950, the Ghetto Fighters kibbutz built a museum and an institute for research about the Holocaust that bear Yits? Ak Katzenelsons name. (YIVO Encyclopedia) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poetry. Half Dollar size chip to cover, no text loss, institutional stamp on title page, taped spine, otherwise Good Condition. (HOLO2-97-33xx)
2 vols., roy. 8vo., Mixed Impressions, with 153 plates on 80; black cloth, gilt backs, a near fine set in unclipped dustwrapper. The set comprises: Vol. I: 1889-1936: Hubris (sixth impression, 1998); Vol. II 1936-1945: Nemesis (first edition, 2000). The definitive biography, widely acclaimed for its detailed research by one of the world's leading authorities on Hitler. COMPLETE SETS ARE SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.