138 résultats
194613981Lodzsh: Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn 1946. 1st edition. Later cloth with original dramatic photgraphic cover mounted on front 8vo 70 1 pages 1 l. includes facsimiles. 21 cm. Poems. "Oysgabes fun Der Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn. Serye yidishe literatur 1." <br> A committee dedicated to recording the fate of Polish Jews published this book length poem by Simkhah Szajewics. Written in the Lodz Ghetto it appeared immediately after the war in 1946; Szajewicz perished in a concentration camp in 1944" from the permanent exhibit at the National Yiddish Book Center which houses their copy in their Rare Book Collection. <br> The book actually includes two long poems: "Lekh-lekha" and "Friling 702 " as well as letters and other related material. <br> See David Roskies interesting reflection on this work and it's stunning photographic cover at jtsa.edu/torah/go-forth-the-grammar-of-remembrance. <br> For more about the author-poet see Chava rosenfarb's essay on Shayevitch in Tablet Magazine at tabletmag.com/sections/arts-letters/articles/the-last-poet-of-lodz. SUBJECTS: Jews -- Persecutions -- Poland -- Lódz. Holocaust Jewish 1939-1945 -- Poetry. Jews -- Correspondence. Expertly rebound in attractive black cloth with the original photographic front cover mounted on the front. Very Good Condition. B HOLO2-110-36-CCALX-'emm H-40-10. Lodzsh: Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn unknown
20003131013Berlin: Wichern-Verlag 2000. 298 Seiten. 8° (17,5-22,5 cm). Illustrierte Orig.-Broschur. [Softcover / Paperback].
194443395Shvayts Switzerland: Undzer Vort Poale Tziyon Left 1944. May 1944. 1st edition. Original stapled printed paper cover 4to 2 25 pages. <br> In Yiddish. Title translates as "In Memoriam. On the Anniversary of the Uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto April-May 1943.<br> First Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising published in Europe during the Holocaust by Jewish "Poale Tziyon Left" members in Switzerland. The organization's name which means "Workers of Zion" is sometimes also romanized as "Poale Zion" or "Poaley Syjon." <br> <br> The imprint "Undzer Vort" "Our Word" was a Left Poale Tziyon publisher in Switzerland which also published a mimeograph newspaper titled "Undzer Vort" OCLC: 232675203 during this same period. A fully underground version of the paper was also published in Nazi-Occupied Belgium see below.<br> <br> Indeed Poale Tsiyon Left was an important part of Jewish resistance throughout Europe most notably during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising which this publication commemorates. <br> <br> "The Holocaust-era Jewish resistance group ZOB was formed from a coalition including Hashomer Hatzair Dror Bnei Akiva the Jewish Bund various Jewish Communist groups and both factions of Poale Zion. Poale Zion was also active in the Anti-Fascist Bloc.<br> Several notable Jewish resistance fighters during the Holocaust particularly those involved in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising were members of Poale Zion. They include:<br> <br> Adolf Berman Warsaw ZOB fighter; Secretary of Zegota Poale Zion Left<br> Hersz Berlinski member of Warsaw ZOB Command Poale Zion Left<br> Yochanan Morgenstern member of Warsaw ZOB Command Poale Zion Right<br> Emanuel Ringelblum member of Warsaw ZOB; chronicler of the Warsaw Ghetto Poale Zion Left" Wikipedia.<br> <br> The booklet opens with the moving story of the start of the uprising:<br> <br> "It has been a year since the glorious uprising of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto.<br> April 19 1943 - barely a few tens of thousands of Jews left in Warsaw after about half a million of their brothers and sisters were exterminated in the most gruesome way they rose up with organized resistance against the renewed attempts.that they too like the previous ones would be led out like sheep to the slaughter.<br> Forty thousand Jews weapons in hand opposed an enemy tenfold a hundred hundred times outnumbered.Women men and children the high class and the humble.<br> From the beginning they all knew without exception that they would be defeated that the outcome was not in doubt and that the enemy intended nothing but destruction for all of them.<br> But no Nazi expected to fall on such a battlefield.<br> And his was the biggest slap in the face which the proud Nazis.so hated when it was received from these these trampled down these unrefined these scorned these despised Jewish 'untermenchen'" Translated from the opening paragraphs on page 1.<br> <br> The publication later continues with a damnation of the "democracies" who did so little and a holding up of the comrades of Poale Tziyon who are doing so much fighting on all fronts:<br> <br> "The 'world democracies' didn't do anything.to save the Jewish victims and to stop the misery train they issued platonic statements about punishing the 'crimes' after the massacre. The warnings have so far helped little.<br> The.Sacrifices keep growing.The world that is fighting 'for justice' and that is busy with courts after the massacre has not found any means to rescue the few escaped heroes in the ghetto for a whole year.<br> This long eulogy is for dozens and hundreds of comrades who fell as loyal children of the nation and fighters for its working class on the fronts in the distant.north in the camps of France and Belgium. who went from one end of the world to the other - at their wounds and from hundreds of thousands of others - comrades of the Poale-Tziyon movement." page 24. <br> <br> Poale Zion.was a movement of Marxist-Zionist Jewish workers founded in various cities of Poland Europe and the Russian Empire at about the turn of the 20th century after the Bund rejected Zionism in 1901.<br> Poale Zion was torn between left-wing and right-wing factions in 1919-1920; the organization formally split at the Poale Zion fifth world congress in Vienna in 1920 following a similar division that occurred in the Second International.<br> The right wing was less Marxist and more nationalist and favoured a more moderate socialist program and supported the International Working Union of Socialist Parties to continue the work of the Second International essentially becoming a social democratic party. The left-wing faction did not consider the Second International radical enough and some accused its members of betraying Borochov's revolutionary principles although Borochov had begun to modify his ideology as early as 1914 and publicly identified as a social democrat the year before his death.<br> Poale Zion Left which supported the Bolshevik revolution continued to be sympathetic to Marxism and Communism and attended the second and third congresses of the Communist International in a consultative capacity. They lobbied for membership but their attempts were unsuccessful as the internationalist communist movement under Lenin and Trotsky was opposed to Zionist nationalism. The Comintern advised individual members of Left Poale Zion to join their national Communist parties as individuals; at their 1922 Danzig conference these terms were rejected by the party. The Comintern declared it an enemy of the workers' movement.<br> Poale Zion Left opposed the decision by Poale Zion to rejoin the World Zionist Organization viewing it as essentially bourgeois in character and viewed the Histadrut as reformist and non-socialist. Aside from differing attitudes towards Zionism and Stalinism the two wings of Poale Zion parted ways over Yiddish and Yiddish culture.<br> The Left was more supportive of the latter similar to the members of the Jewish Bund while the Right bloc identified strongly with the emerging modern Hebrew movement in the early 20th century.<br> In Poland for a brief period following World War I both factions of Poale Zion were reported as legal and functioning political parties. The Polish Left party was the largest Left Poale Zion party in the world. It worked closely with the Bund in developing Yiddish schools in Poland and supporting secular Yiddish culture although they had political differences e.g. the Bund was more supportive of the Polish Socialist Party than LPZ.<br> As part of the large-scale ban on Jewish political parties in post-World War II Poland by the Communist leadership both Poale Zion groups were disbanded in February 1950" Wikipedia.<br> <br> Interestingly the image on the front cover this distinctive gravestone with "Yizkor" in a specific heavy font was a frequent image for memorials to the victims of pogroms as well as the Shoah in particular for memorials to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. A few examples include:<br> • Hashin & Ben Gurion Yizkor tsum ondenken di gefalene vekhter un arbeiter in Erets Yisroel New York Poale Zion Palestine Committee 1917. Internal illustrated title page<br> • Hurbn Proskurov New York: Proskurover Relief Organization 1924. See image on JHU's online Yizkor Book Exhibit at www.library.jhu.edu/news/2025/06/yizkor-books-traveling-homelands-and-portable-memorials And from another memorial to the first anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising:<br> • Tsum Yortog Funm Oyfshtand in Varshever Geto April-May 1943. Ramat Gan: Defus "liga" 1944. OCLC: 63647084. See Nr. 35 in our catalog 215 at danwymanbooks.cdn.bibliopolis.com/images/upload/catalog-215.pdf <br> <br> "Undzer Vort" also published similar underground Poale Tziyon Left newspapers and other materials in Nazi-occupied countries such as Belgium: <br> "'Linke Poale Zion' Left-wing Workers of Zion was a Zionist-Socialist party in Belgium and one of the initiators of the Jewish Defense Committee of Belgium. This committee managed to save about 3000 children and several thousand Jewish adults from the clutches of the Nazis.<br> With his party comrades Abusz Werber ensured the editing publication and distribution of 28 issues of a secret underground newspaper in Yiddish"Unzer Wort" Undzer Vort Our Word which appeared until the Liberation in September 1944 and even after" Werber The Word of Abusz Werber 2017. Note how the Yiddish documents on the cover of the book are similar to our Undzer Vort publication from Switzerland: https://m.media-/images/I/71sWHrhxgoL._SL1360_.jpg. <br> <br> SUBJECTS: Holocaust Jewish 1939-1945 -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Illustrations. <br> OCLC: 233365664. OCLC locates only 1 copy worldwide NLI.<br> <br> Final leaf in facsimile. Paper toning as expected but strong. About Very Good Condition thus. Rare and important. B Holo2-163-28-XX. Shvayts [Switzerland]: Undzer Vort [Poale Tziyon Left] unknown
199316023München, Kindler, 1993. Pappeinband, Schutzumschlag, 4°, Querformat, ganzseitige, fotografische s/w-Abbildungen, 116 Abbildungen; -sehr gutes Exemplar.
19855361CBGütersloh, Gütersloher Verlagshaus Mohn (= Gütersloher Taschenbücher Siebenstern Band 1084), 1985. 8°, 140 S., illustr. original Kartonage (Paperback), Taschenbuch Erstausgabe sehr schönes, sauberes Exemplar (Li2 - A)
1963106585AB(Bonn, 1963). 8°. 104 S. Original-Karton. (=Schriftenreihe der Bundeszentrale für Heimatdienst; 32).
19961057209München: Kindler Verlag, 1996. 213 Seiten; sehr zahlr. Illustrationen (Fotografie); 30,5 cm; fadengeh. Orig.-Pappband mit illustr. OUmschlag.
19841045854Frankfurt: Zweitausendeins, 1984. XXXIII, 179 S. Originalbroschur.
198317088München ; Wien : Hanser 1983. XXXIII, 179 S. : 180 S. Abb. ; 31 cm, mit Schutzumschlag Gewebe, gebundene Ausgabe, Leinen, Exemplar in gutem Erhaltungszustand, Neupreis in DM: 168,--
193321864Paris, Plon, collection Byblis, 1933 ; in-8, chagrin maroquiné prune, dos à nerfs soulignés de filets à froid et dorés, titre doré, filet doré d'encadrement des plats, double filet doré d'intérieur, tête dorée, non rogné, couverture imprimée en orange et noir et dos conservés (rel. de l'époque) ; 208 pp., [4] ff. les 2 derniers blancs, 12 compositions hors-texte en couleurs, avec serpentes, de Manuel Orazi, y compris le frontispice.
19951090468o.J. (ca. 1995). 174 S. Text (mit Abb.) sowie zahlreiche Illustr. (vorw. Fotografie) auf Tafelseiten. 29 cm. Originalhardcover.
198458070Dover Publications Inc., New York 1984. 4°. XXV, 131 S., überwiegend schwarzweiss Fotos Softcover/Paperback, book in good condition, Exemplar in gutem Erhaltungszustand
199414684Varsovie, s.d. (1994), in-4°, 296 pp, très nombreuses photos, cart. éditeur illustré. Texte bilingue anglais et allemand. Warsaw, Poland: Drukarnia Naukowo-Techniczna, 1994 Hard Cover. Near Fine. Laminated pictorial boards, black and white. Text is in English and German. Privately printed in Poland. Illustrated with black and white photographs and drawings. Ink stamp of Warsaw Ghetto on title page.
1950JUDA1940New York, Knopf 1950. 632 pp, publ. green cloth with blindstamped design to front board, dust jacket (designed by Georg Salter), book in fine condition, jacket chipped at the edges. The story of the extermination of the Jews of the Warsaw ghetto.- Second printing of the first edition, february 1950.
1984100147321Cambridge University Press 1984 240 pages 46x549x351cm. 1984. Cartonné jaquette. 240 pages.
19802590London, Secker & Warburg 1980. OLn. mit Orig.-Schutzumschlag. 119 (2 w.) n. n. Bl. Mit zahlr. Abbildungen (Dokumente, Photographien, Karten u. Pläne). 4°. An den Ecken stellenweise etwas bestoßen. Gut erhaltenes Exemplar. Mit eigenhändiger Widmung und Unterschrift von Andrzej Wirth für "Walter Jens mit der Erinnerung an die alte Freundschaft Berlin, Juni 1980".
194043325New York: American Jewish Committee 1940. 1st separate edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo pages 119-133 14 pages total. “Reprinted from Contemporary Jewish Record March-April 1940.†Includes photo of “Armbands which Nazis are compelling the Jews to wear.†Moldawer’s story originally appeared in The Forward N.Y.C. Jan. 2-5 1940 in Yiddish. <br> Moldawer a Polish Jew who had resided in Germany had been caught by the outbreak of the war in Hamburg on his way to the United States. Together with other Jews holding U.S. visas and steamship tickets on the Hamburg-America Line-which had suspended operations-he was deported to Lublin via Prague. Moldawer used his U.S. visa and left Poland in December 1939 and was able to issue this report which became important at the time for understanding what was happening to the Jews in Poland and is often cited in later analysis. <br> <br> “During the Holocaust 99% of the Jews from Lublin District in the General Governorate of German-occupied Poland were murdered along with thousands of Jews who had been deported to Lublin from elsewhere. There were three extermination camps in Lublin District Sobibor Belzec and Majdanek.<br> The ghettoization of the Jews for the purpose of persecution terror and exploitation in the Nazi German controlled towns began immediately after the invasion of Poland….The number of major urban ghettos established in the General-Government in 1939–40 including those of Kraków and Warsaw reached one hundred before the end of the year. In the Lublin area the situation initially differed. Instead of their urban concentration some 10000 Polish Jews had been expelled from Lublin in early March 1940 to the rural towns where ghettos were not set up based solely on Globocnik's opposition to the Jewish people living near his staff headquarters. The remaining 40000 Jews of Lublin were forced into the Lublin Ghetto in May 1940†Wikipedia. <br> SUBJECTS: Nazi concentration camps. World War 1939-1945 -- Jews. Concentration Camps Camps de concentration nazis. Guerre mondiale 1939-1945 -- Juifs. Majdanek Concentration camp. OCLC: 39753405. Touch of edgewear to rear wrapper Very Good Condition Overall. B HOLO2-162-15-AX-BB. New York: American Jewish Committee unknown
199310409BBOxford, Oxford University Press, 1993. 8°, VII, 299 S., original Pappband (Hardcover), original Schutzumschlag, second reprint Schutzumschlag rückseitig an einer Stelle minmal knickspurig, sonst ein sehr schönes, sauberes Exemplar (in englischer Sprache) (L)
198426638ABWashington, The Bureau of Educational Research, 1984. gr.8°, XCI, 1.483 S., Text: englisch, original Kartonagen, Einbanddeckel minimal berieben, sonst ein gutes Exemplar (hhreg)
1988100145334Northwestern University Press 1988 266 pages 14 99x2 29x22 61cm. 1988. Broché. 266 pages.
1993100147195Da Capo Press 1993 408 pages 14 5x22 1x3 3cm. 1993. Broché. 408 pages.
1943100147338Roy Publishers 1943 in8. 1943. Cartonné. Ce livre publié en octobre 1943 est un compte-rendu détaillé du martyre des Juifs de Pologne depuis le début de l'invasion allemande en septembre 1939 jusqu'au printemps 1943 couvrant notamment la liquidation du ghetto de Varsovie. Il est présenté comme un document compilant les événements tragiques de l'extermination alors que plus de 80% des victimes de la Shoah avaient déjà été assassinées
19444620<p>New York: Yiddish Scientific Institute 1944. Paperback. 1st separate edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 28 pages. 23 cm. Wolff #I: 1441. Includes map in black red and white as the full-page center spread. <br />Early report on the uprising: "It is as yet impossible to give a complete picture of the resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto.The material is as yet too scarce. " <br />"This paper was read at the eighteenth annual conference of the Yiddish scientific institute on January 9 1944 .The paper was delivered in Yiddish and is published in the Yivo bleter Journal of the Yiddish scientific institute XXIII 1 January-February 1944." <br />Very good condition. B HOLO2-65-17.</p> Yiddish Scientific Institute paperback
197030911Frankfurt am Main [u.a.] : Fischer, 1970. 161 S. 8°. Ungekürzte Ausg. - [Nachaufl.]. OKt. (Tb). (Fischer-Bücherei ; 615)
1945STAN0099Praha, Delnicke Nakladatelstvi 1945. 22x15cm. 80 unpaginierte lose Seiten, 27 ganzseitige photogr. Abb., in ill. OUmschlag. Umschlag gering randrissig u. rückseitig etwas stockfleckig, sonst sehr gut erhalten. Die erste Bilddokumentation aus dem befreiten KZ Theresienstadt. Von großer Seltenheit.