2 194 résultats
4to. Xxxi, 425 pages. First edition. Has become the standard bibliography for works on the Holocaust up to 1960. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) bibliography; Jews Germany history 1933-1945 bibliography. CONTENTS: The Jewish catastrophe in historical perspective. --Reference tools. --Research: institutions, methods, and techniques. --Documentation. SERIES: Yad Washem Martyrs' and Heroes Memorial Authority, Jerusalem. Yivo Institute for Jewish Research, New York. Joint documentary projects. Bibliographical series, ; no. 1; Variation: Yad va-shem, rashut ha-zikaron la-Shoah vela-gevurah. ; Mifalim meshutafim. ; Sidrah bibliyografit ; ; no. 1. An historian and lawyer, Robinson (1889-1977) was born in what is now Lithuania and graduated from the University of Warsaw law school. He helped establish a Hebrew school system after WWI, and in 1922 was admitted to the bar and elected to the young Lithuanian parliament. As the Nazis gathered power in Germany, Robinson put together a secret committee to protect Jewish rights, and used his position and connections to help German Jews emigrate to Lithuania. In 1940, he left Lithuania for New York, where he continued to work for European Jewry, establishing the Institute of Jewish Affairs, assisting the prosecution at the Nuremburg trials, helping the UN establish the Human rights Commission, and drafting Israel's Reparation Agreement with West Germany. (EJ, 2007) Ex library. Front hinge starting, otherwise good condition. (Holo2-11-17)
Wrappers; 12mo. 41 pages. In French. Series: Centre de documentation auprès de l'U. J. R. E. ; Walach, Elie, 1921-1942 -- Correspondence. Lettres adressées à un jeune résistant juif, ouvrier et poète, Elie Walach. Préface de Marie Romain Rolland. Pages still uncut. Spine starting to chip; browning; upper corner of back cover is bent. Good condition. (H-34-8)
Boulder, San Francisco, and Oxford: Westview, 1993.; 8vo. Xi, 144 pages. Includes notes and index. The author puts forth the concept that bringing the Nazi criminals to trial is vital to maintaining a moral and ethical society apart from any current threat they may be. War crime trials. World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities. Jews; Genocide. Ex-library, outer-pages worn, otherwise in very good condition (Holo2-89-18)
Softcover, 45 pages, 8vo, 23 cm. Series: David W. Belin lecture in American Jewish affairs. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Public opinion. Public opinion -- United States. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Influence. Note(s) : "Presented March 20, 1995 at the Jean and Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, The University of Michigan"--P. Facing title page. Includes bibliographical references (p. 39-45) . OCLC lists 32 copies worldwide. Slight markings on front cover. Otherwise, good condition. (Holo2-16-28)
Hardcover, xii, 374 pages, illustrated, 8vo, 25 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Yiddish literature -- History and criticism. Hebrew literature, Modern -- History and criticism. Jews -- Persecutions -- Europe, Eastern. Jews in literature. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) , in literature. Litterature yiddish -- Histoire et critique. Litterature hebraique moderne -- Histoire et critique. Juifs -- Europe orientale -- Persecutions. Juifs dans la litterature. Holocauste, 1939-1945, dans la litterature. Vervolgingen. Joden. Beinvloeding. Letterkunde. Kunst. Yiddish literature, 1860-. ; Special subjects: Jews; Persecution - Critical studies. Note(s) : Includes index. Bibliography: p. 313-361. OCLC lists 786 copies worldwide. In dustjacket. Sunning to top 1/4 inch of cover. Otherwise, Very Good Condition. (Holo2-18-4)
Hardcover, 424 pages, 8vo. Includes Livia Rothkirchen, "Czech. Attitudes toward the Jews during the Nazi Regime, " and other articles. Light wear. Very good condition. (Holo2-20-10)
Wrappers; large 8vo. 12 pages. Offprint. Cover soil; back page of one copy bent; else very good condition. (H-31-1)
8vo. 437 pages. First edition, third printing. The author, a methodist minister, led the largest clergy demonstration of the Civil rights era in the US. SUBJECT (S) : Protestant churches - United States; United States - religion. CONTENTS: Introduction; the ministries of hate and disruption; The Protestant underworld vs. Dwight D. Eisenhower; The plot against the Jews; Hitler's ghost in American garb; The self-anointed "chosen people"; Fiery crosses, the shame of America; "No Popery!"--bigotry's battlecry; Saboteurs of Protestant co-operation; "Modernism"--and the "battle of the Bible"; Seeing "red"; The hammer and sickle behind the cross; God and the "libertarians"; The struggle within Methodism; Denominational dilemmas; Conclusion: swords into plowshares. SERIES: Beacon studies in church and state. Ex library, otherwise good condition. (Holo2-12-16)
Rebound, Good Condition; Small 8vo; 122 pages; In Polish. Young David Rubinowicza's powerful Holocaust diary, covering the period 1940-41, prior to deportation to Treblinka. Cited by Drewnowski in his article on Polish Literature on the Holocaust (Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, p.884) (HOLO2-83-45)
Softbound. 4to. 111 pages. 30 cm. First edition. Includes 108 color and black and white photographs. Book publication to accompany an exhibition held in Australia: JDC and the Jewish Museum of Australia will present Nationality: Stateless, Destination: Australia, an exhibition which features previously untold personal stories and photos from JDCs vast archives that illustrate the hardshipsand triumphsof these Jewish refugees as they migrated from Europe and attempted to rebuild their lives in Australia. This pivotal chapter in Australian Jewish history is explored through the stories of those whose lives were shaped by the tireless work of the JDC. (JDC press release) Subjects: Jewish refugees - Australia - Exhibitions. Jews - Australia - Exhibitions. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Australia - Emigration and immigration - Exhibitions. OCLC lists four copies (Massey Univ, Brandeis, USHMM, YIVO) . Near fine condition. (HOLO2-97-36)
Cloth; 8vo. Xviii, 585, xiii pages. First edition. With material on the Mein Kampf, Leon Blum and Tripoli. A survey of the position of the Jews amid the swiftly changing condition of the contemporary world tracing the record of events from Versailles to the end of 1939. Extensive material on the condition of Jews in Europe under the Nazis, also in South America "Selected bibliography": p. 581-585. Lehmann page 27. Jews -- Social conditions. Jews -- Politics and government. Jews -- Persecutions. Jews -- Social conditions. Jews -- Politics and government. . Jews -- Persecutions. Some underlining in pencil. Cover darkened with age, with some soil. Spine shaken. Good condition. (H-33-7)
8vo. 256 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - reparations; World War, 1939-1945 - Jews - Europe; Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany; Germany (West) - foreign relations - Israel; Israel - foreign relations - Germany (West) . CONTENTS: The background of the negotiations; Leading up to negotiations with Germany; The deliberations at Wassenaar; The agreements and the struggle for their approval. ISBN: 031232622X. Has lightly worn dust jacket. Very good condition. (Holo2-12-6)
Softbound. 8vo. 240 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Contains 43 testimonies from the Child Survivors/Hidden Children of the Holocaust, Palm Beach County, Florida. "This book speaks for us, for those who were silenced and to those who will fight for equality; the Child Survivors/Hidden Children of the Holocaust, Palm Beach County, Florida. " With 43 black and white illustrations. Subjects: Jewish children in the Holocaust - Biography. Holocaust survivors - Biography. Jews - Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives. World War, 1939-1945 - Children. World War, 1939-1945 - Jews. Europe - History - 1918-1945 - Biography. OCLC lists 30 copies worldwide. Brand new volume. Great condition. (HOLO2-104-41)
Original Illustrated Wrappers bound into later cloth 12mo. 230 pages. 18 cm. First Edition. In Ukrainain. Memoir of Ulas Samchuk, a Ukrainian Journalist, writer and member of the Ukrainian Government in Exile as well as the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. During World War II, Samchuk was the head of the civilian police of the Reichskommisariat in Rivne. From 1941-1943, he was editor of the Rivne newspaper Volyn', before fleeing to Germany in 1944, where he founded and headed the literary-artistic organization MUR until 1948. In 1948, he emigrated to Canada and became the leader of the Slovo Association of Ukrainian Writers in Exile. The administration's tasks included the pacification of the region and the exploitation, for German benefit, of its resources and people (Wikipedia). For more see Dieter Pohl, Schauplatz Ukraine: Der Massenmordan den Juden im Militärverwaltungsgebiet und im Reichskommisariat 19411943."Subjects: Refugees -- Ukraine -- Biography. OCLC lists 24 copies worldwide. Tear at top front hinge of later boards, internally Very good condition. (UKR-1-26A)
Original Stiff Wrappers. 12mo. 158 pages. 20 cm. First edition. In Spanish. Neruda and Sutzkever: Two Rebel Poets written by Gregory Sapoznikow; translation of the original Yiddish by Itsjok Niborski. This work by the Argentinian Yiddish literary critic and psychoanalyst Gregory Sapoznikow constitutes a dual biography and literary interpretation of parallel experiences of both poets, Sutzkever and Neruda, namely, the strength and poetic development of two partisans in the fight against fascism. Includes translations of select poems by Abraham Sutzveker into Spanish. Although Abraham Sutzkever was born in Lithuania in 1913, he spent his early childhood in Siberia. During World War II he fought against the Germans with the partisans, helped save national cultural treasures and was evacuated from Vilna to Moscow in the middle of the war. Sutzkever immigrated to Israel in 1947, and has earned the title of that countrys foremost Yiddish poet. He founded the Yiddish literary quarterly, Di goldene keyt (The Golden Chain) in 1948. Never forgetting his country and the annihilation of his people in Europe, Sutzkevers writing continues to demonstrate the historical events of the past. He has received the highest literary prizes of both Lithuania and Israel. His poetry and fiction have been translated into many languages, including Hebrew, French, English, German, Russian, Polish and Japanese. Born in 1904 in Chile, Pablo Neruda began writing poetry at an early age and had his first poem published at the age of thirteen. Neruda is best known as a poet, but he served as a consul for the Chilean government and traveled on behalf of the government to Burma, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Singapore, Argentina and Spain. Nerudas close friend, García Lorca, was murdered during the Spanish Civil War and his death affected him greatly. In response to Lorcas murder, Neruda joined the Republican movement in Spain and later in France. In 1939, he was appointed consul for the Spanish emigration in France, and soon after sent to Mexico. There he rewrote his Canto General de Chile, an epic poem about South America. In 1945 he was elected a senator. He openly opposed the then repressive government of Chile and was forced to live underground in his own country for several years. He managed to leave in 1949, but returned in 1952. Throughout his lifetime Neruda continued to write. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971. He died in 1973. Subjects: Neruda, Pablo, 1904-1973 - Criticism and interpretation. Sutzkever, Abraham, 1913-2010 - Criticism and interpretation. Lightly shelf wear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-97-46xx)
Original Publishers Cloth. Large 8vo. 741; 545 pages. 25 cm. In Hebrew. Massive work. Title translates to English as, Test of Response and Redemption: The pioneering movements in Poland during and after 1939-1945. Vol 1: Bi-netiv ha-yisurim veha-meri [The Path of Suffering and Revolt]. Vol 2: Tekumah min ha-efer [Rebirth from the Ashes]. SUBJECT (S) : Labor Zionism -- Poland -- History. Jews -- Poland -- History -- 20th century. Jewish youth -- Poland -- History -- 20th century. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jewish resistance -- Poland. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Bright, clean copies in Very Good Condition with like jacket. (HOLO2-79-5)
Softbound. 8vo. VII, 106 pages. 22 cm. First edition. This publication gives a brief history of Jews in Albania with an emphasis on their exodus in 1991; it emphasizes the widely unknown exceptional situation of Jews in Albania during the Second World War, in that not a single Jew was taken to any of the Nazi concentration camps. This accounts for the extraordinary fact that by War's end there were more Jews in Albania than before, due to an influx of Jews fleeing from other countries, not only Yugoslavia and Greece, but also from further afield such as Germany and Austria. Central to Sarner's history is Josef Jakoel (1922-91) , spiritual head of the Jewish community in Albania, whose perseverance in his faith managed to prevent the very small Jewish community in Albania from completely losing touch with their roots and with each other although travel even within Albania during the Communist period was extremely limited, and the few Jews were scattered between Tirana, Durres, Vlora and Shkodra. A second important theme of Sarner's account is the story of Albania's "Righteous" (those non-Jews identified and honored by Yad Vashem as people who risked their lives to rescue Jews during the Holocaust) . Sarner gives details of some of these people and families (Moslems and Christians) who housed and hid Jews, some for years; he remarks on the extraordinary generosity of those hosts, their refusal to accept recompense and their ungrudging giving even in situations of extreme danger. Not only were Jews offered hospitality by individuals and families; the Albanian government also heeded the code of honor for guests and refused to obey the command of the Italian occupies to expel all foreign Jews, and even provided a small stipend for needy refugee families. Subjects: Jews - Albania -History. Joden. Holocaust. Light shelf wear. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-97-14)
Hardcover, 416 pages, illustrated, 8vo, 24 cm. In German. SUBJECT (S) : Jews, German -- United States. Jews -- Germany. In dust jacket. Light wear to edges of front and back cover. Very good condition. (Holo2-20-1) xx
Original Stiff Wrappers. 8vo. 184, [16] pages. 21 cm. First edition. In German. Title translates as: Resistance in the Rhine and Ruhr, 1933-1945. Published by the Association of Victims of the Nazi regime of North Rhine-Westphalia, a post war association of German anti-fascist resistance members and concentration camp survivors, founded as a means of support for 250, 000 formerly persecuted political prisoners. The author, Karl Schabrod (1900-1981) was a pre-war radical woodworkers and journalist for a communist paper, he was arrested in 1934 for anti-fascist leaflets in Dusseldorf and imprisoned in the Börgermoor concentration camp. He was released, and arrested again for anti-fascist activities, and was sentenced to life imprisonment; he was liberated by Americans in 1945. He resumed his activities, helping rebuild the short lived activity of the post war German Communist Party in the Federal Republic, and was actively involved in the support network of the Association of Victims of the Nazi Regime. He was blacklisted by the Federal Republic in 1950, and worked as a carpenter, and remained politically active for the remainder of his life, spending another stint of nine months in jail in 1958 for being a communist actively seeking to become elected in the local parliament of North Rhine-Wesphalia. Schabrod wrote at least five volumes dealing with the resistance struggles and political prisoners in the anti-nazi struggle. In this volume, a general survey of the resistance in the Rhine and Ruhr region, encompasses not only the radical miners and proletarians who maintained literary and active struggle against the nazis throughout these years, but also details the open resistance in the region at the closing of the war, wherein many anti-nazi fighters waged open battle as the Ruhr pocket was being closed; many of these fighters being liquidated by the SS. Includes dozens of hand-drawn illustrations of underground newspapers and leaflets, assuredly lost and redrawn from memory by the author. Includes a large register of anti-nazi comrades killed in the struggle. Subjects: Anti-Nazi movement - Germany - North Rhine-Westphalia. Nationalsozialismus. Widerstand. Geschichte 1933-1945. North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany) - History. Rheinprovinz. Ruhrgebiet. Light wear to covers, fresh and clean. Good + condition. (HOLO2-100-29)
Softcover, 11 pages, 8vo, 22 cm. A look at what should happen to world Jewry in light of the Holocaust, including the Jewish state and the Jewish communites of Europe, the US, and elsewhere. By a leader of the Bund, author of POLSKA I ZYDZI (1942) . Important. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Refugees. Jews -- Palestine. OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide. Light wear. Wear to edges. Very good condition. (Holo2-19-69) xxx
Softcover, 32 pages, 8vo, 23 cm. In German. Nazi-era Antisemitic tract. "Does El Shaddai the God of the Jews Still Produce Anything? A Gruesome Example of Induced insanity: Excerpt From 'The Crucified'" SUBJECT (S) : Judaism -- Controversial literature. Bible. O. T. -- Controversial literature. Cover title. Includes bibliographical references. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide. Sunning to edges of cover. Light wear. Very good condition. (Holo2-24-5)
Cloth; 8vo. Xviii, 234 pages. Examination of a theater event that took place as a direct result of a call by Mussolini to create a Fascist theater for 20,000 spectators. This book examines the place of media, technology and machinery in the fascist imagination. Fascism and theater -- Italy. Theater -- Political aspects -- Italy. Named Person: Pavolini, Alessandro, 1903-1945. Apparent printing errors in first fourteen pages; otherwise, excellent condition in very good dust jacket. (H-34-2)
Wrappers; small 8vo. 20 pages. Contains endnotes and one chart. Text on cover: "Working Papers in Holocaust Studies II/ Holocaust Studies Program/ Yeshiva University/ March, 1989." Katyn Massacre, Katyn', Russia, 1940. World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Katyn Forest. A product of the Institute on research and teaching of the Holocaust held at Yeshiva University in the summers of 1986 and 1987./ Includes bibliographical references. Slight browning; very good condition. (H-34-3)
Xiii, 162 pages, 12mo, 19 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Antisemitism. Jews -- Politics and government. Jews -- Identity. Bibliography on pages 159-162. Ex-library with usual markings. Hinge repair. Wear to binding. Slight browning of pages. Otherwise, Very Good Condition. (Holo2-18-27)
Xiii, 162 pages, 12mo, 19 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Antisemitism. Jews -- Politics and government. Jews -- Identity. Bibliography on pages 159-162. Wear to soine. Slight browning of pages. Good + condition. (Holo2-18-27)