2 194 résultats
8vo. 371 pages. First edition. In Hebrew. Holocaust memoir. SUBJECT (S) : World War, 1939-1945 personal narratives, Jewish; Jews Poland -- biography. OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide. Very good condition. (HOLO2-6-33)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 114 pages. 24 cm. First edition. German Faces is a collection of 48 photographs and dozens of interviews with Germans living in all occupation zones and attempting the reconstruction of post-war Germany. Included are interviews with former soldiers, former political prisoners and camp inmates, many liberals, leftists, housewives, and certain nazis. The author, Ann Stringer was born Elizabeth Ann Harrell in Eastland, Texas in 1918. Her Family moved to Tyler shortly after her birth, where she attended Tyler High School. She went on to study journalism at Tyler Jr. College, Southern Methodist University and the University of Texas. In 1941, she moved to Columbus, Ohio with her first husband, William Stringer, where they both worked for the United Press. As a team, the Stringers traveled on assignments to New York, South America, and Europe. After William was killed in France in 1944, Ann went to Europe alone and became a United Press war correspondent. In 1949, she married Henry Ries whom she met in Germany. Together they wrote a book titled German Faces. (Ann Stringer collection, Ohio State University) . Subjects: Germany - History - 1945-1955. Light wear to edges, no dustjacket, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-102-21)
Paperback. 8vo. X, 306 pages. 24 cm. Second edition. With fourteen black and whites illustrations. From evidence gathered in France, Germany, and England, John F. Sweets has produced an insightful reappraisal of French life during the war at Clermont-Ferrand, the largest town near the occupational capital of Vichy [ ] Having thoroughly examined town archives, records, and manuscripts, the author reconstructs occupational commerce, education, media, and attitudes, maintaining that, contrary to popular opinion, the vast majority of French were far from collaborationist. Choices in Vichy France details the effects upon society of war, oppression, internment, rationing, aryanization, and propaganda, painting a portrait of the wartime French that lies somewhere between the extremes of outright resistance and enthusiastic collaborationism. With illustrative examples of what day-to-day life was like in the region for the German, the Jew, the Communist, and the fascist, as well as the French masses, this provocative book opens a remarkably clear window onto an era of history often fraught with misunderstanding and suspicion. (Publishers description) . Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - France - Clermont-Ferrand - Case studies. France - History - German occupation, 1940-1945. World War, 1939-1945 - France - Clermont-Ferrand. World War, 1939-1945 - France - Auvergne. Vichy-bewind. Guerre mondiale, 1939-1945 - France - Clermont-Ferrand. Guerre mondiale, 1939-1945 - France - Auvergne. Very good condition, like new. (HOLO2-100-12)
Softcover, xiv, 396 pages, 8vo, 25 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Bibliography. Joden. Holocaust. Edited by David M. Szonyi. Very good condition. (Holo2-19-56) xx
Pamphlet, 24 pages. In Yiddish. Sermons from England from the DP period. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish sermons, Yiddish. Festival-day sermons, Jewish. OCLC lists 1 copy (NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND) . (HOLO2-13-15)
Stapled. 8vo. 6 pages. Reprinted from, Hebrew Union College Annual, Vol. XX, 1947 with an inscription from the author on the cover. Chushan-Rishathaim was king of Aram Naharaim, or Northwest Mesopotamia. In the book of Judges God delivers the Israelites into his hand for eight years. They are delivered from him by Othniel, son of Kenaz. Eugen Täubler (October 10, 1879 August 13, 1953) was a German historian born in Gosty? . He studied history in Berlin under Otto Hirschfeld (1843-1922) , receiving his doctorate in 1904 with a dissertation titled Die Parthernachrichten bei Josephus. From 1910 to 1914 he worked as a lecturer at the Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums (Higher Institute for Jewish Studies) in Berlin. From 1922 to 1925 he taught classes at the University of Zurich, and in the years 1925 to 1933 was a professor of ancient history at the University of Heidelberg. In 1933 he was removed from his position at Heidelberg by the Nazis, and returned to teach at the Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums. After the institute's forced closure in 1941, Täubler emigrated to the United States, where he became a professor at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. OCLC lists one copy (University of Basel Universitatsbibliothek) . Slight discoloration to cover at edges with some edgewear. Internal pages are darkened but all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-21)
Softbound. 8vo. XI, 261 pages. 22 cm. First edition. Poems and fiction by Herman Taube, with a foreword by Elie Wiesel and watercolors by Steffi Rubin. Herman Taube was born in Lodz, Poland in 1918. Orphaned at an early age, he was brought up by Mirle and Gershon Mandel, his grandparents. Gershon ran a small shop that produced soap and candles. Herman attended a yeshiva (school for study of the Torah) prior to WWII. Gershon hoped his grandson would become a rabbi, but Herman instead began nursing in 1937. Herman was called for duty as a medic in the Polish Army in August 1939. Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, thus marking the start of WWII. The Polish army was defeated within weeks of the blitzkrieg, (lightning war) . The Soviet Union occupied eastern Poland according to the German-Soviet Pact on September 17, 1939. Herman, along with the retreating Polish Army, was captured by the Soviet forces after crossing the Bug River. While officers and those of higher rank were sent to Katyn and later executed, lower ranking soldiers were sent to Siberia, a harsh area of the Soviet Union where gulags (Soviet work camps) were located. German forces invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941. Based on an agreement between the Soviet government and the Polish government in exile, all Polish citizens held in Soviet camps were to be released (in part, to create a Second Polish Army in exile) . Upon his release, Herman went to Uzbekistan to join the Second Polish Army. He worked as a medic in Uzbekistan for two years until his unit moved to the eastern front. In June 1944 Herman was injured when the ambulance he was riding in drove over a land mine. After recuperating Herman was sent to the headquarters of the Second Polish Army, newly stationed in Lublin, the former Lublin/Majdanek concentration camp. Herman worked in the Majdanek hospital, caring for the liberated prisoners who were left behind when the retreating Nazis liquidated the camp. Shortly thereafter Herman was sent to work in a hospital in Pomerania where he worked until the end of the war. After the war Herman married Susan Strauss, a fellow survivor. The two immigrated to the United States in 1947. Herman is the author of more than twenty novels and books of poetry and has worked as a writer and journalist for over 60 years. Herman and Susan live in the Washington, DC area and volunteer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (USHMM) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poetry. Very light shelf wear to covers. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-100-40)
Cloth. 8vo. 119 pages. 21 cm. First Edition. Inscribed by the author on the title page, dated May 19, 1969. Herman Taube immigrated to the United States, where he wrote for the Jewish Daily Forward, from a European Displaced Persons camp in 1947. This novel is about a former German citizen who flees to Poland, and later to Russia, to escape the war. OCLC lists 14 copies worldwide. Dust jacket is lightly worn with some fading on the spine. Book itself has tight binding, in very good condition. (HOLO2-31-18)
12mo. 142 pages. In Yiddish. "The Unforgotten." Translated into Yiddish by Herman Taube. Holocaust novel. Susanne Taube was born in Vacha, Germany, in 1926. Her family was deported from Berlin to the Riga ghetto in 1942; after the liquidation of the ghetto, she was in the Kaiserwald concentration camp, and thereafter suvived as a forced laborer. She met her husband Herman Taube, a Polish Jew originally from Lodz, and married in 1945. After time in the Ziegenhain displaced persons camp, her and Herman emigrated and eventually settled in Baltimore. SUBJECT (S) : Fiction. OCLC lists 19 copies worldwide. Top corners bumped. Inscribed by the translator in year of publication. Very good condition. (HOLO2-6-10) Xx
Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 7 pages. 23 cm. "But the house and the Jews are there no more.../The cap is all that remains of Jack/The house is a heap-its floors burnt black. /But deep in the cellar, day after day, / his fiddle waits for someone to play. " Reprinted from The Polish review, vol. 13, no. 2, Spring, 1968, with new pagination. The translator was a leading 20th Century Yiddish poet. OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide (Michigan, SUNY-Buffalo, HUC) . Very Good Condition. (H2-1-17) xx
Original stiff wrappers . 8vo. 184 pages. 22 cm. First edition. This memoir relates the wartime experiences of Jewish partisan Doctor Michael Temchin. Dr. Temchin, nicknamed 'Znachor' (Witch Doctor) was at first the commander of the partisan unit of A. L. (Armja Ludowa) , the leftist underground organization in Poland, and after became chief of the medical services of the partisans. The partisan unit under the leadership of Dr. Temchin consisted of Jews and non-Jews, and was active in the area of Krasznik (Lublin district) . The Jewish and Polish partisans planned to rescue Jews in the ghetto of Krasznik before they were taken onto the crematoria, and waited for a sign from the ghetto to start the attack on the little town and liberate the Jews. The ghetto representatives kept postponing their decision to act. The partisans warned them that it might soon be too late, but the inhabitants of the ghetto were in no hurry to call for help from the partisans. A possible reason for their reluctance may have been the fact that they knew of the mass murders of Jews in the partisan units, carried out by Polish fascist groups, living in the woods. Of course the partisans did not want to attack without the consent of those helpless Jews living within the walls. The entire ghetto was wiped out in one night, and only a few succeeded in escaping to the partisans. (In the book The Jewish Partisans; Part 2, page 210) Among the most famous Polish partisans was Major 'Znachor' (Dr. Michael Temchin) . General Rola-Zhimierski, the commander of the A. L. Declared at a meeting of the Polish National Assembly on the 2nd of January 1946: Jewish soldiers fought against the occupation forces with much devotion and courage. They were valiant fighters and very often great heroes; and in his letter to the Organization of Jewish Partisans (F. P. O. ) , the general wrote: Among the Jews who remained alive there were thousands who went into the woods to fight with arms, and fought together with their Polish partisan comrades against the common enemy. (M. Kahanovitch, The War of the Jewish Partisans in Eastern Europe; pages 250, 252) Subjects: Jews - Poland - Biography. Jewish physicians - Poland - Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poland - Personal narratives. World War, 1939-1945 - Personal narratives, Jewish. Physicians - Autobiography. Holocaust - Autobiography. War - Autobiography. Temchin, Michael, 1909- Poland - Biography. Covers worn at edges. Light pencil marks in a few margins; otherwise clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-100-49)
8vo. 182 pages. First edition. Published as the war was ending, proposals for rebuilding, revitalizing, and securing the Jewish people. With the scarce dust jacket. SUBJECT (S) : Reconstruction (1939-1951) ; Jewish question; World War, 1939-1945 Jews; Zionism, Human rights. Lacking Jacket. Previous owner's stamp and small tear on flyleaf, good condition. (HOLO2-7-21)
Wrappers; 8vo. 286 pages. Photograph of author on back cover. Includes references and index. Text from cover: "A frank and often shocking account which details how 'Hitler's own' have managed to return to power in almost every walk of German life-including the foreign office, the courts, the police...." By a former German economist and newspaper editor who was put in a concentration camp, escaped, and eventually emigrated to the United States. Fascism -- Germany (West) National socialism. Fascisme -- Allemagne (Ouest) Nazisme. Germany (West) -- Politics and government. Allemagne (Ouest) -- Politique et gouvernement. Pages brown; otherwise, very good condition. (H-35-4)
Cloth; 8vo. 286 pages. Photograph of author on back cover. Includes references and index. Collage of newspaper headings on inside front and back covers. "A frank and often shocking account which details how 'Hitler's own' have managed to return to power in almost every walk of German life-including the foreign office, the courts, the police...." By a former German economist and newspaper editor who was put in a concentration camp, escaped, and eventually emigrated to the United States. Fascism -- Germany (West) National socialism. Fascisme -- Allemagne (Ouest) Nazisme. Germany (West) -- Politics and government. Allemagne (Ouest) -- Politique et gouvernement. Very good condition in fair dust jacket. (H-35)
Bombay: People's Publishing House, 1951. Wrappers; 12mo. 19 pages. Text on back cover reads in part: "In 1920 Thaelmann joined the Communist Party of Germany, bringing with him 90 per cent of the Independent Social Democratic Party of Hamburg. In the years that followed, this simple Hamburg docker rose to the leadership of the Communist Party by the dint of devoted effort and unfailing service. Around him gathered millions in the fight against Hitler. As Communist candidate in the presidential elections of 1932, Thaelmann polled over five million votes. Long before Hitler came to power, Thaelmann strove to achieve the unity of the German working-class movement as the only way to bar the advance of Fascism. " OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Paper yellowed; top right corner slightly wrinkled. Very good condition. (H-30-2)
ISBN: 3938286032. Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 41 pages. Includes 1 illustration. 22 cm. Hefte zur Regionalgeschichte; nr. 3. Includes bibliographical references on page 41. In German. Subject(s): Refugees, Jewish --Germany --Giebelstadt. Refugee camps --Germany --Giebelstadt. Holocaust survivors --Germany --Giebelstadt. Very Good+ Condition. (h2-3-11)
8vo; 48 pages; Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 48 pages. 22 cm. In the original Danish. Immediate post-war history of Jewish persectuion and deportation in the Holocaust, written by a Danish minister, with one section devoted specifically to Jews in Norway. The index lists a "Litteratur" item on page 48. Good example of Scandinavian Christian Philosemitism. SUBJECT(S): World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Light wear to wrappers; previous owner's name marked and rubbed from title page. Overall very good condition in good jacket. (HOLO2-65-12a).
Cloth; 8vo. Xiv, 417 pages. Second edition. Added title page: Le origini diplomatiche del Patto d'acciaio Translation of Le origini diplomatiche del Patto d'acciaio. Bibliographical footnotes. Europe -- Politics and government -- 1918-1945. Germany -- Foreign relations -- Italy. Italy -- Foreign relations -- Germany. Excellent condition in very good dust jacket. (H-33-4)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 75 pages. 21 cm. In Dutch . Series: Rijksinstituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie. Kleine serie geschriften, ; nr. 1. Title translates to English as, German Occupation of the Netherlands and the Financial Development of the Country During the Years of Occupation. Series is overseen by the Dutch Royal Institute for War Documentation. SUBJECT (S) : Finance, Public Netherlands. Financiële ontwikkeling. Bezettingen. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Slight discoloration at edges of cover and on title page. Otherwise nice, clean copy with tight binding. Very good condition. (HOLO2-35-8)
8vo. Xii, 371 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; World War, 1939-1945 - personal narratives, Jewish. ISBN: 0812825004. Born to a rabbinical family in Kutno, Poland, Trunk (1905-1981) mostly wrote in Yiddish, and was "the last major representative of the Eastern European Jewish historians who were trained before the Holocaust. " Trunk earned a master's degree in Warsaw in 1929, and there was part of a group that later became a branch of YIVO. He taught in Bialystok and Warsaw until WWII began, and then sought refuge in the Soviet Union for the duration. After a few years in Israel and elsewhere, Trunk emigrated to the US in 1954, eventually becoming chief archivist at YIVO. (EJ, 2007) Has dust jacket. Good condition. (Holo2-12-9)
Stapled Pamphlet. 8vo. 32 pages. In Yiddish. Also published in Polish. The Polish Bund was formally founded in 1914 but was eventually driven underground during the holocaust. After WWII, the Bund renewed its activities among the survivors of Polish Jewry but it was liquidated in 1948 with the Communists' liquidation of the general political life of the country. This periodical was published in the wake of that renewal. CONTENTS: 48 Yor Bund", "Undzer Anteyl in Varshever Oyfshtand", "Emigrazie un Emigratsionizm", "Bagrisungen fun Khaverim in Amerikeh", "Fun der amerikaner Bundisher Presse", and others. Pages tanned. Very good condition. (YID-11-22) .
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 138 pages. A compilation of readings on the Holocaust designed for use by youth leaders. Illustrated with sketches and photographs. Ex-lib with usual markings. Very good condition. (H-33)
Rear board scuffed, otherwise Very Good Condition; 8vo; 262 pages; 24 cm. Includes added title page in English: "The Jews in the Ukraine, from the earliest times through 1648-1649." 1 of only 2000 copies printed. Good condition. (EE-3-35)
Orignal Cloth. 8vo; 180 pages; 23 cm. Poetic reminiscences for this Moldovan Jewish community SUBJECT(S): Travel. Joodse literatuur. Yiddish poetry. Ungheni (Moldova) -- Description and travel -- Poetry. Moldova. Very Good Condition; (ee-1-1)
Softcover, folio, xii, 280 pages, illustrations, 28 cm. Contents: Planning guide accompanied by February, 1992 draft of lesson plans. SUBJECT (S) : Descriptor: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Holocaust Remembrance Day -- United States -- Handbooks, manuals, etc. Cover title: Fifty years ago: in the depths of darkness: 1992 days of remembrance: Sunday, April 26 through Sunday, May 3, 1992. Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-253) . Filmography: pages 255-265. Ex-library stick on front cover. Lightly bumped corners. Good condition. (Holo2-71-13)