6 565 résultats
8vo; 79 pages; 23 cm. Fifth Edition. An early call to action to push for US government support for German Jews. Contents include: Precendents for Popular Protests; American Governmental Intercession on Behalf of the Jews; The Bernheim Upper Silesian Petition before the Council of the League of Nations [description & analysis]; Petition of Franz Bernheim to the Council of the League of Nations [exact text of the petition]. Very good Condition. (HOLO2-87-4)
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. Viii + 36 + iv pages, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish. The beginning of the Second World War is simultaneously the beginning of suffering, pain, death, martyrdom and heroism of the Jews of Czestochowa. In the early morning hours of Friday, the first of September, 1939, Nazi Germany attacked Poland. And already on the third day, at nine o'clock in the morning on Sunday, the third of September, the Nazi motorized units began to penetrate Czestochowa and, one day later, there began the first slaughter which received the name Bloody Monday. Monday, the fourth of September, under the false accusation that Jews had shot at Germans, a horrible pogrom took place that lasted three days. The first victim was Naftali Tenenboym, owner of a button factory at 7 Pilsudskego Street. The second victim was Luzer Prafart, who was known under the nickname Po Pientsh ([Polish for] five each) . The third, Katz, a carpenter by occupation, was known as a leader in the artisans unions. Among the numerous victims in the three day pogrom was the son of the Rosh-Hayeshiva [Head of the Talmudic academy], Yakubovitsh. The first three days of Nazi rule over Czestochowa were marked by bloody murder and looting. Jewish economic life was completely paralyzed. Cultural, social, and political life, including the entire school system, was completely dissolved. Falling like hail, there were repressions and decrees aimed at psychologically choking Jewish life, the theft of Jewish property, the exploitation of the Jewish labor force for free, and the placing of Jewish life into a lawless situation. (translated from book, Jewishgen 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Czestochowa. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC: 19303642. Ex library with usual marks, some wear on cover, some chipping on spine. Pages in Very Good Condition. (YIZ-18-3)
8vo; 77 pages; 23 cm. "Reprinted from the 'Bulletin of the Jewish Academy of Arts and Sciences' for the American Jewish Committee." First separate edition. An early call to action to push for US government support for German Jews. Contents include: Precendents for Popular Protests; American Governmental Intercession on Behalf of the Jews; The Bernheim Upper Silesian Petition before the Council of the League of Nations [description & analysis]; Petition of Franz Bernheim to the Council of the League of Nations [exact text of the petition]. Light wear, Very good Condition. (HOLO2-87-4B)
Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 79 pages, chiefly illustrations. 31 cm. "Photo-record of Axis crime" Very Early (1945) publication of photos of the Holocaust and abuse of civilians-Concentration camps, destroyed villages, public executions, death, destruction, and mayhem. Particularly interesting because of its target population: the lay-out mimics a supermarket tabloid, suggesting an attempt to reach a more unsophisticated audience in its documentation of Nazi & Japanese Terror. Forewards by Prof. James Sheldon and former Ambassador to Germany James W. Gerard. SUBJECT(S): World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities -- Pictorial works. World War, 1939-1945 -- Pictorial works. OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide. some wear to spine, damp stain with damage to lower corner affecting edges of some graphics, Good Condition (holo2-139-21)
1st English Language edition. 4to. Original wrappers, xxxix + 663 pages. Illustrations throughout. In English. The book by Serge Klarsfeld, contains vital statistics of some 76, 000 Jews deported from France. Together with his wife Beate, the Paris-based Serge Klarsfeld has published lists of Jews deported from France and Belgium over the last decades. He was the leading Nazi hunter in France . France was one of the more liberal nations in opening its doors to Jewish refugees from Poland, Romania, and Germany. Some 350, 000 Jews were living in France when the Germans invaded the country in June 1940. More than half of them were refugees from Germany who had arrived during the 1930s. Many were French citizens whose families had lived in France for centuries and who were fully assimilated. Others had come to France, often from Eastern Europe, to seek a better life and escape from antisemitism. Approximately 76, 000 Jews were deported from France between 1942 and 1944. Most went to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where the vast majority were exterminated on arrival. Klarsfeld's book is a most startling document. Nearly the size of the Manhattan (NYC) telephone directory, it lists nearly 76, 000 names of Jews deported to Eastern Europe or killed in France. Names are listed in alphabetical order, according to each of the 80 convoys. Family name, first name, birth date, place of birth, and nationality are recorded for every person. Klarsfeld also provides a detailed history of each convoy. (Jewishgen 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Persecutions -- France. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Registers of dead -- France. World War, -- Deportations from France. Ethnic relations. Genealogy. Translation of: Le mémorial de la déportation des juifs de France. OCLC: 9685134. Small tear to margin of cover, otheriwse Very Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-16-20) xx
8vo; 424 pages; 1st edition. Original Blue CLoth21 cm. . In Yiddish. Special issue to "Unser Weg". "The extermination of the Jews of Kowno (Kaunas) " on copyright page. Includes index, portraits, music and 18 pages of photo plates. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum keeps their copy in their Rare Book Collection. Pages tanned. Very Good condition (YIZ-3-11)
1st edition. Original cloth in dust jacket. 8vo. 231 pages. Illustrated. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews Lithuania history; Haskalah Lithuania history. SERIES: Dos Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70; Variation: Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70. Born in Warsaw, Shatzky [1893-1956] received his doctorate in 1922 for a dissertation on 19th-century Polish-Jewish history. During World War I he served as an officer in the Polish Legion. From 1913 on he wrote Polish articles and reviews on Jewish literary and historical subjects. He came to write mainly in Yiddish after 1922, the year he settled in the U. S. Where he was one of the founders of the U. S. Section of YIVO. From 1929 until his death he was librarian of the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Shatzky's range was extraordinarily wide: Spinoza, psychiatry, theater, music, folklore, literature, language, and other areas. His principal field, however, was Eastern European Jewish history, and his major work was his history of Warsaw Jewry. He was an indefatigable and often querulous reviewer of scholarly works; the quality and accuracy of his own historical scholarship has often been questioned. (Prager, EJ) Has tanned dust jacket and sewn in ribbon bookmark. Very good condition in very good jacket. A gorgeous copy (YIZ-8-5) x
1st edition. Original publisher's cloth, 4to; 342 pages; In Yiddish. With lots of illustrations and detailed index. Light wear, Overall Very Good Condition. (YIZ-5-8)xx
8vo; 262 pages; 1st edition. Original publisher's cloth. 8vo, 262 pages. 24 cm. Includes added title page in English: "The Jews in the Ukraine, from the earliest times through 1648-1649." Only 2000 copies printed. Very Good Condition. (YIZ-6-7)
8vo; 238 pages; 24 cm. 1st edition. In Yiddish. Personal narrative of life in the Ghetto, including the authors' role as a leader in the resistance. 11 photo plates. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum keeps their copy of this book in their Rare Book Collection. Chip to corner of of front cover, no text affected, otherwise Good Condition. (YIZ-3-5A)
100126346Avila San Roque in8. Sans date. Cartonné.
100126346Avila San Roque. bords frottés couverture défraîchie intérieur jauni propre circa 1940. in8. Sans date. Cartonné. Avila San Roque unknown
Original wraps. 8vo. 52, [2] pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Spanish. At head of cover: Para que ellos puedan volver a vivir, which translates as So they may live again. Title translates as: Emergency Relief and Reconstructive Aid: annual report on the work of the Joint (for the year 1945 and early months of 1946) . The 1946 annual report of the American Jewish Joint distribution committee; detailing the activities of the Joint in assisting holocaust survivors and refugees all over Europe, as well as in south America, Palestine, and Shanghai. Includes tables of figures of the situation for refugees, and the assistance given by the Joint; includes 22 black and white facsimile contemporary photographs. Subjects: Jews in Europe. World War, 1939-1945 - Jews. Jewish refugees. Holocaust (1939-1945) . OCLC lists one copy. Pen and ink marks on front cover, light soiling and wear to wraps, otherwise fresh and clean. Good + condition. (HOLO2-103-47)
1933GITc777Hamburg Cigaretten-Bilderdienst 1933. Grand in-8 151pp imprimées sur 2 colonnes. Cartonnage éditeur toile brune bradel, titre doré sur le dos et le 1er plat, celui-ci orné d'un motif doré et à froid. Portrait de Hitler en uniforme en frontispice, 10 dessins dont 1 à pleine page et 1 sur double page de portraits, 4 planches hors texte dont 2 en couleurs, 225 photographies originales de différents formats contrecollées, 1 grand panorama se dépliant plusieurs fois (rassemblement des étendards du Congrès de Nuremberg de 1933). Bel exemplaire, bien complet de toutes ses pièces. Impression gothique.
1st edition, Original paper wrappers. 8vo. XI, 232, 178, [2] pages. 24 cm. In Hebrew. Two issues have separate title page and abstracts in English, Yiddish; issue one also includes an abstract in Russian: Pages for the study of the catastrophe and the revolt published by the Yitzhak Katznelson Ghetto Fighters House. Major essays include: Dr. Emanuel Ringelblums Literary Remains; Aktion Stroop; On Cultural Life in the Lodz Ghetto during the year 1940/41; Results of an Enquiry Conducted Among the Members of the Ghetto Fighters Kibbutz; Brief Notes. Collecting Material for recent Jewish History; Some Rescue and Relief Activities; The Pogroms in Poland (1935-1937); The linguistic heritage of the Nazi years and its expression in Hebrew Literature; Poems by Katznelson, and Book Reviews. On the Kibbutzim, "Very few museums of Holocaust history were set up; the first of these was founded only a few years after World War II, with the arrival in Eretz-Israel of refugees from the war and a group who had been fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. This united group found[ed] the 'Ghetto Fighters Kibbutz', Kibbutz Lochamei Ha-Ghettaot, and in 1951 inaugurated the 'Itzhak Katznelson Ghetto Fighters House'. The museum became a center for education, research, mass memorial assemblies, and was a central institution on the subject of the Holocaust and the Rebellion until the consolidation in the 60s of the 'Yad Vashem' museum in Jerusalem" (Museum Ein-Harod, 2012). Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Periodicals. World War, 1939-1945 - Jews - Periodicals. Ex-library with usual markings. Pages aged, brittle. Covers aged and torn. Otherwise clean. Fair condition. (HOLO2-102-44)
24 fasc. in-4° (cm. 31x21), complessive pp. 768 con varie ILLUSTRAZIONI. fasc. edf. a graffe autocopertinati, due fasc. con ill. in cop. (tra cui il num. speciale "Anno Decimoi").Rivista quasi ignota, uscita da dic. 1925 al 1943, rilevante per alto taglio culturale, attenta alla politica estera, agl Italiani e alla cultura italiana all'estero, a quello che gli stranieri pensano dell'Italia ecc. Tra i collaboratori::Anton Giulio BRAGAGLIA (su Gerardo DOTTORI), Omar EL-BEDAUI ("La tribù distrutta", romanzo. 22 puntate), CAPEZZUOLI "La Triennale a Milano), BRACALONI (Dolomiti, il Pievano Arlotto, Sposaizio alla fattoria, presso Volterra), A. Ravenni (Aviazione), S. PANUNZIO (Stato e Rivoluzione), BASEVI, CIARLANTINI e altri (molto su HITLER e Nazismo), Carla ALBINI (arte del libro), DISEGNI e dip. di Gerardo DOTTORI, Mariette LYDIS (due donne, Ars amandi), Costantino Parthénis, Boldini, Favretto, Funi, Salietti, de Grada.Cecioni, Carpi, Zanini, Sironi; disegni pubblic. di auto di F. De CAVERO, Cava. Inoltre: Malta, III Mostra d'Arte del Sindacato Lombardo, Sorel e l'Italia, L'enigma della guyerra futura, MOSTRA del '900 a PARIGI (10 pagine! 6 ripr. di italiani), rubriche "La Bilancia Libraria" e "Pagine Biografiche", la XVIII BIENNALE dfi Venezia e ital. all'estero (36 pagine, 20 ill.), Marinetti e i prefascisti, Primo Littoriale d'Arte, Faenza e Oriani, L'Argentario ecc.
1st English Language Edition. Softcover, 76 pages, 8vo, 23 cm. On the warsaw uprising, written by a participant who survived. SUBJECT (S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Poland -- Warsaw. Jews -- Poland -- Warsaw. "Translation of a pamphlet published in Warsaw, Poland, in 1945 by the Central Committee of the 'Bund. '" Some fading and sunning to cover. Wear to edges. Otherwise, Very Good Condition. (Holo2-18-24)
Original Wrappers. 12mo. 78 pages. 19 cm. Illustrated. First Edition. In Ukrainian. Black and white photogtaphs of Kiev throughout the wartime period. Alternate title in Spanish, âKiev Bajo Las Ocupaciones Enemigas. "Written by Leonti Forostivsky, after his emigration to Argentina in 1943. Forostivsky, a historian interested in the Nazi occupation of Kiev, served as Head of the Kiev city council from February, 1942 until November , 1943. In this description of the city under Soviet and Nazi occupation he reports the destruction of Khreschatyk area of Kiev was destroyed by Soviet mines placed during the Red Army retreat from the city in 1941. The remote detonation of the Soviet mines preceded the notorious Babi Yar massacre, which was described by the Nazi occupiers as reprisal for guerilla attacks against them. Subjects: Kiev (Ukraine) -- History. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Some edge wear and age toning. Light soiling to wrappers. Very good condition. (UKR-1-43)
195515894Eigenvlg. Brigitte Frank, Neuhaus 1955. 445 S. OLwd. Der Schutzumschlag gering beschädigt. Schönes Exemplar. 2. Aufl.
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 77 pages. 21 cm. First Edition. "One of the first (and most detailed) studies of the works of famous Ukrainian writer, born in the city Trostianets. [Trahediya] Khvylovy (1893-1933) was written in exile, in a camp for internally displaced people (1947) by literary critic Paul I. Petrenko (1903-1982) , under the pseudonym O. Hahn." (Sumy News) Khvylovy was a prominent Ukrainian Bolshevik author who, after the arrest of a close friend, renounced Stalin and committed suicide. Subjects: Authors, Ukrainian -- Biography. Political activists -- Ukraine -- Biography. OCLC lists 24 copies worldwide. Light age toning and shelf wear. Writing in ink in center of front cover. Previous owner inscription on title page. Good condition. (UKR-1-39)
Good Solid condition.; 8vo; 387 pages; In Yiddish. Not in Robinson & Friedman nor Wolff. Jewish partisan's memoirs of resistance against the Nazis in Poland. Illustrated with many photographs throughout. Inscribed by Kaczerginski in year of publication. Kaczerginski (19081954) was a Yiddish writer and cultural activist. Born in Vilna to a poor family and educated at that citys Talmud Torah, Shmerke (Pol., Szmerke) Kaczerginski lost both his parents during World War I. As a youth, he was involved with outlawed Communist groups and was arrested several times, serving a lengthy prison term. In the 1930s, two of his revolutionary poems became popular in Poland. He wrote short stories with a radical bent and was a correspondent and reporter for literary publications, including the semilegal leftist press in Poland and the New York Communist daily Morgn-frayhayt. Kaczerginski played a key role in shaping the writers and artists group Yung-Vilne; he organized its evening events and was the de facto publisher of its three miscellanies between 1934 and 1936. During the period of Soviet control over Lithuania in 19401941, he was even more active in the field of Yiddish culture, but at the same time experienced his first disappointments with the attitude of the Soviet regime toward Jewish culture. During the first period of Nazi occupation, Kaczerginski wandered through villages and towns posing as a deaf mute; after many difficulties, he ended up in the Vilna ghetto. Kaczerginski was very involved in the ghettos cultural activities. As a leader of its youth club, he wrote its Yugnt-himen (Youth Hymn), a song that immediately became popular. In 1943, he wrote the song Shtiler, shtiler in memory of the mass murders committed at Ponar. Set to music that Aleksander Volkoviski (later known as Aleksander Tamir) had submitted to a contest organized by the ghetto, the song was first heard at an evening performance there and over the years became one of the best-known songs of the Holocaust. With Avrom Sutzkever and others, Kaczerginski became part of a group of forced laborers whom the Germans designated to sort Jewish cultural treasures at YIVO and other locations. Known as the Papir-brigade (Paper Brigade), the groups members risked their lives to hide the most significant items, smuggling them back into the ghetto or entrusting them to non-Jewish acquaintances. Kaczerginski was a member of the Fareynikte Partizaner Organizatsye (United Partisans Organization; FPO), and, since YIVOs building was located outside the ghetto walls, he took part in smuggling weapons into the ghetto. In September 1943, Kaczerginski, along with Avrom and Freydke Sutzkever and other members of the FPO, escaped from the Vilna ghetto as part of an organized group of fighters just before its liquidation. They joined a Soviet partisan unit in the Naroch Forests, where Kaczerginski fought as a partisan until liberation in July 1944. Kaczerginskis books describe the destruction of Vilna, the partisan struggle, and his own experiences during the Holocaust period: Khurbn Vilne (The Destruction of Vilna; 1947), Partizaner geyen (Partisans on the Move; 1947), and Ikh bin geven a partizan (I Was a Partisan; 1952) (YIVO, 2010). Wear to cover and edges, very good condition. (HOLO2-87-3A)
Original Cloth. 4to. 99 pages. 26 cm. First edition. In Hebrew. Added English title page: Oroth meophel; bibliography of Jewish religious books published in Europe (1933-1945) . Important bibliography of religious books published during the holocaust era in Europe. Subjects: Judaism - Bibliography. Judaism. Bibliography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Europe. Jewish literature Publishing Europe. Cloth soiled, internally clean and fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-124-5)
193727278Berlin, Volk und Reich, 1937. Gr.-8vo. 5 Bl. Text u. 52 Bl. m. knapp 100 ganzs. photograph. Abb. u. einigen Texten. OHlwd. m. Deckel- u. Rückentitel.
8vo; Complete in 2 volumes. Warszawa: Wydawn. Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej & Wojskowy Instytut Historyczny. 25 cm. xix, 755 pages (text), plus accompanying clamshell portfolio volume of 80 folding maps (all indexed), many in color. Massive work, a must for the study of the Nazi invasion of Poland, an its eventual liberation. (Holo2-83-18)
1938614348Berlin, (1938). 120 num. Bl. Mit 2 Karten. Klammergeheftet, vom Umschlag nur noch der lose u. eingerissene Vorderdeckel erhalten. [2 Warenabbildungen]