2 488 résultats
Original Cloth. 8vo. 64 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. 'Merciful Father'. With illustrations throughout by Ezekiel Schloss. Holocaust poems by David Einhorn (18861973) , Yiddish poet and publicist. Av Ha-Rahamim is a memorial prayer for Jewish martyrs and martyred communities. This prayer, by an unknown author, was composed in memory of the martyrs massacred in Germany during the First Crusade. It is first known from a prayer book dated 1290. The prayer emphasizes the merit of the martyrs who died for kiddush ha-Shem. - EJ 2008. Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - Poetry. World War (1939-1945) . Yiddish poetry. Top of backstrip torn, otherwise very fresh and clean. Very good condition. (HOLO2-117-48)
1st edition in English. Original string-bound Paper Wrappers, 18, [6] pages plus [5] leaves of tissued photo plates 25 cm. "Translated from the German by Rev. C. A. Rubenstein, A. M. , Rabbi, Har Sinai Congregation, in commemoration of the centenary of the birth of David Einhorn, Nov. 10, 1909 . Personal recollections of Dr. David Einhorn by Solomon Lauer. " SUBJECT (S) : Jewish sermons -- Maryland -- Baltimore. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide, none west of Cincinnati. Touch of edgewear to wrapper which is splitting at spine, all tissued plates and text pages very good. Scarce and important. (kh-3-21)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 222, [2] pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Book one only. The Hitlerite Policy of Jewish-Destruction, in the years 1939-1945; an expression of German imperialism. At head of title: Yidisher Historisher Institut in Poyln. The author also published in 1955 a Yiddish volume concerning the Remilitarization of West Germany and the Role of Hitlers Generals. Written by Artur Eisenbach (19061992) , a Polish Jewish historian. Artur Eisenbach was one of the last representatives of a distinguished group of scholars who, in the years before World War I and in independent Poland between 1918 and 1939, laid the foundation for an investigation of the Polish Jewish past. He was influenced primarily by the Marxist school of Jewish historians, in particular by Raphael Mahler and Emanuel Ringelblum (whose sister he married) . Eisenbach was an active member of the Yunger Historiker Krayz (Young Historians Circle) founded by Mahler and Ringelblum. Eisenbach spent World War II in the Soviet Union, but his wife and child were trapped in Buczacz, where they were murdered by the Nazis in 1942. After his return to Poland in May 1946, he worked at the Central Historical Commission of the Central Committee of Polish Jews. When the Jewish Historical Institute was established later that year, he was appointed head of its archives, and subsequently became a researcher. In the decade following the war, Eisenbach devoted himself entirely to studying the Holocaust. Later he gradually returned to the theme that he had devoted himself to before the warJewish emancipation in the first half of the nineteenth century. In 1966, he became a member of the Committee for the Historical Sciences at the Polish Academy of Sciences and was awarded the title of professor. In the same year, he was appointed director of the Jewish Historical Institute. In 1968, Eisenbach was forced to resign his latter position, and retained only his title at the Polish Academy of Sciences. He decided not to emigrate and in the following years produced a series of monographs on Polish Jewish problems in the first half of the nineteenth century, research that formed the essential basis for future work on this subject. He also continued to work on Holocaust themes, editing Ringelblums diary and essay on PolishJewish relations. In his last years, he moved to Israel, where he had a nephew and where, active as ever, he worked on an account of PolishJewish relations in the nineteenth century. (Yivo Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe) . Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Germany - Politics and government - 1933-1945. Light wear to wraps, pages lightly aged, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-11)
1st edition. Original Paper Wrappers, Large 8vo, 111 pages. 24 cm. In the original Polish. The title translates as: Anglo-American Talks with Germany Regarding the Jewish Population During World War II. SUBJECT (S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. OCLC-Worldcat lists 18 copies worldwide, none in New York. Paper browning, light wear to wrappers, Good Condition. (holo2-125-41) xx
VG/NONE; 1st edition. Original Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 7 pages, 23 cm. Holocaust-era tract. "The Jews of Palestine are the only Jews in the world, who, under attack, as Jews, stand their ground as a people, fight back, give blow for blow, defend their homes, refuse to be humiliated and to retreat....they are the same Jews who, a few short years ago walked the streets of Warsaw and Berlin and Vienna. Indeed, many still trapped in these cities of death would have been in Palestine these last years if they had not been kept imprisoned by the lack of immigration certificates" (p. 5). Eisenstein was a leder of Reconstructionist Judaism. Light Wear, Good+ Condition (ZION-9-13)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 171, [1] pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Norwegian. Title translates as: People among the people: a book on anti-Semitism and xenophobia. Written by Leo Eitinger (1912 - 1996) , Holocaust survivor, Norwegian psychiatrist, and Human Rights advocate. He devoted a long period studying late-onset psychological trauma amongst Holocaust survivors, wherein Holocaust survivors like Paul Celan, Primo Levi and many others committed suicide due to holocaust trauma, several decades after the experience, towards late adulthood. Leo Eitinger was born in Lomnice, Moravia, at that time a town in the Austrian-Hungarian empire; currently the capital of Jihomoravský kraj and belonging to the Czech Republic. He studied medicine at the Masaryk University of Brno, graduated in 1937, and was drafted as an officer into the Czech Air Force. In 1939 he fled Nazi persecution of Jews and came to Norway as a refugee with the help of Nansenhjelpen. Upon arriving in Norway, he arranged for Jewish children to escape from Czechoslovakia to settle in the Jewish orphanage in Oslo. He was given permission to work as a resident in psychiatry in Norway in Bodø, but the permission was revoked by the Nazis after they invaded the country in 1940. He stayed underground from January 1941 until he was arrested in March 1942. He was imprisoned in various places throughout Norway and was deported on the ship Gotenland on February 24, 1943, arriving by train via Berlin at the concentration camp at Auschwitz (where the number 105268 was tattoed on his arm) and was later moved to Buchenwald. Of the 762 Jews deported from Norway to German concentration camps, only 23 survived - Leo Eitinger was one of them. After returning to Norway he specialised in psychiatry. In 1966 Leo Eitinger was appointed professor of psychiatry at the University of Oslo and became Head of the University Psychiatric Clinic. After the war Leo Eitinger allocated all his time and efforts to the study of human suffering with emphasis on clinical psychiatry, in particular victimology and disaster psychiatry. He conducted several landmark studies about the long-term psychological and physical effects of extreme stress and also about being a refugee. Some of the major works have been published; e. G. Concentration camp survivors in Norway and Israel (1964) ; Mortality and morbidity after extreme stress (1973) ; Strangers in the world (1981) (University of Oslo description) Subjects: Antisemitism -- History. Race Relations. Jews. Popular Works [PT]. Sociology. OCLC lists 16 copies. Pages lightly aged, contain consistent penciled marks throughout, and penciled notes on endpages. Otherwise fresh. Good condition in good jacket. (HOLO2-104-4)
199719324AFrankfurt am Main, Verlag Neue Kritik, 1997. 8°. 133 Seiten. Original-Pappband mit Original-Umschlag. (Sehr gutes Exemplar).
1969100151772JULLIARD 1969 in8. 1969. Cartonné. Cet ouvrage d'Eliahu Ben Elissar examine systématiquement les relations entre la persécution des Juifs sous le Troisième Reich et la politique étrangère de Hitler replaçant le problème des Juifs sous contrôle allemand dans le contexte international des années 1933-1939. Basé sur des milliers de documents historiques il vise à mieux comprendre comment ces deux aspects se sont influencés mutuellement
198915557CBFreiburg im Breisgau/Basel/Wien, Herder, 1989. 8°, 206 S., farbig illustr. original Kartonage (Paperback), 3. Auflage obere Ecke des Einbanddeckels minimal bestoßen, obere Ecke des Rückdeckels minimal bestoßen, Remittendenstriche auf Fußschnitt, sonst schönes, sauberes Exemplar.
DISPONIBILITÀ GARANTITA AL 99%; SPEDIZIONE ENTRO 12 ORE DALL'ORDINE. MAI SFOGLIATO. LIEVI SEGNI DEL TEMPO ALLA COPERTINA. Amicizia, pietà, collera, dolore dell'esistenza sono i temi centrali di questo romanzo. Chi è Gavriel, il giovane misterioso che Gregor incontra alle porte della foresta in cui si è rifugiato per sottrarsi alla deportazione? Sembra un profeta; ma forse - è solo un ossesso, oppure un fantasma... Perseguitato, arrestato, torturato, Gavriel cambia infatti tanti nomi quanti sono gli ebrei che soffrono nell'Europa martoriata dalla guerra e sperano nel sogno del Nuovo Continente, ma soprattutto - e nono- stante tutto - cerca Dio per mille vie, note o poco battute, logiche o, più spesso, irrazionali. E infine Gavriel sparisce, lasciando Gregor solo con la sua tormentata coscienza, oppressa dal disagio e dalle contraddizioni dell'essere ebreo. In questa lucida ma commovente parabola, ricca di simboli e di metafore, Elie Wiesel affronta con passione il tema del coinvolgimento di Dio nelle vicende umane, un Dio debole, che patisce violenza e proprio per questo è vicino e solidale a coloro che soffrono. Dopo un incontro clandestino in un'Ungheria devastata dalla guerra e dalle persecuzioni antisemite, Grègor non ha più abbandonato la visione del misterioso Gavriel. Chi era? un profeta, un pazzo, un fantasma? Grègor insegue vanamente quella visione, scoprendosi coinvolto in una disperata ricerca della propria identità perduta, di un'amicizia agognata, di un Dio della cui esistenza si dubita, a fronte di tante iniquità. Informazioni bibliografiche Titolo: Le porte della foresta Collana: Volume 219 di TEA Due Autore: Elie Wiesel Tradotto da: Laura Guarino Traduzione di: Les portes de la forêt Editore: Milano: TEA DUE, 1994 ISBN: 8878195456, 9788878195455 Lunghezza: 262 pagine; 22 cm Soggetti: Narrativa moderna e contemporanea (dopo il 1945), Romanzi, Letteratura Francese, Cultura ebraica, Olocausto, Shoà, Auschwitz, Buna, Buchenwald, Nobel per la Pace, yiddish, Seconda guerra mondiale, Deportazioni, Ebrei, Persecuzioni, Nazismo, Hitler, La notte, Ebreo errante, Rabbi, Diaspora, Ebraismo, Europa, Est, Shoah, Memoria
Original Publishers Cloth, 8vo, 98 leaves ; 21cm. In Hebrew. DP publication. Reprint of 1788 ed. SUBJECT (S) : Hasidism. Bible. O. T. Pentateuch -- Commentaries. OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide (JTS, Nat Lib Israel, Michigan, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek) . Front board bowing, paper browning as generally found, hinges starting to crack, but a solid copy. Good condition thus. (holo2-85-8)
1st edition, original portfolio wrappers, 8vo. 53 pages, plus many blank and unnumbered pages. Illustrations throughout. In French. Title translates as, Without Flowers Nor Crowns. This book is told in the first person, in a succession of scenes, impressions, portraits, thoughts, reflections and emotions that, in chapters very brief and titled, make up a devastating panorama about Elinas experience in Auschwitz. (elcultural.com 2018). "When I returned from Auschwitz in 1945, I felt what I had just experienced with such acuteness that it was impossible for me to keep it to myself. I recorded it in notes and drawings. This constituted Without flowers nor Crowns. I do not regret having written these notes as soon as I returned from camp because, over time, memories become distorted, they become watered down or dramatized, but always move away from the truth. (...)" Odette Elina (1910-1991) was a painter, was deported by the Gestapo to Auschwitz-Birkenau in April 1944 as a communist, but above all and above all because she was Jewish. In 1940, she entered the French Resistance network, she had had an initial function to establish the liaison between the writers residing in the South zone (notably Mauriac, Aragon and Julien Benda) before entering the Secret Army in 1942. We actually know very little about the biographical career of Elina before and after her deportation, apart from her exacerbated desire on leaving the Camp to testify to her life in the Camp. Without Flowers nor Crowns, [was] originally published in 1948 in the wake of the first testimonies on the Holocaust that appeared in the post-war years..." (Isabelle Dumont). SUBJECT(S): World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, German. Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) -- Camps de concentration -- Récits personnels. Französin. Elina, Odette. Auschwitz (Concentration camp). Konzentrationslager. OCLC: 58452978 (2005 edition by later publisher, with the OCLC record incorrectly listing the original 1st edition as 1947 instead of 1948). OCLC lists no 1948 (or 1947) copies online. Pages are loose as issued, in an illustrated portfolio. This book is one of 270 numbered copies. Illustrated with 12 inset drawings, one reproduced on the cover; the title page mentions 13 drawings (?), but there are only 12, the same number as reproduced in the 1982 reissue [and also in the other copy of this first edition we examined], so "13" would seem to be incorrect or possibly counting the repeated drawing on the cover. Portfolio is slightly rubbed with short closed tear at lower front inside fold and spine has some creasing, else Very Good Condition. Important and exceedingly rare (HOLO2-141-27-IIIXX)
1st edition. Original color paper wrappers. 8vo, 47 pages. Black and white photographs throughout. Holocaust-era imprint calling on American's to reject racism, bigotry, and Antisemitism. "Christian young people are increasingly aware of the implications of religious and racial antagonisms, and are determined to make concrete their religious professions of love and brotherhood. To help them in the human engineering problem of bridging the gulfs between men is the purpose of this booklet. " (from foreword by author) Describes different religions and includes questions to discuss and things to do for each one. Table of Contents: Who are we Americans? , Roman Catholics, The Jewish People, Protestants, Our Racial Minorities, Cooperating for Common Ends. SUBJECT(S) : Minorities -- United States. Prejudices. Minorities. Race relations. OCLC: 638880464, OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide. (HEBREW UNION COL; TRINITY UNIV, COATES LIBR; WISCONSIN HISTL SOC LIBR; TEL AVIV UNIV) Blue cover with illustration of bridge. Few pencil notes on cover, previous owner's stamp on title page, light wear to front and back cover, else clean copy. Very Good Condition overall. Scarce. (HOLO2-159-1-2) xx
Mm 160x225 "Collana Storica Rizzoli". Volume cartonato rigido con sopracoperta originale a colori, 526 pagine Bibliografia ed indice dei nomi in chiusura. Libro in ottime condizioni ovvero mai letto, spedizione in 24 ore dalla conferma dell'ordine.
197911360Wien [u.a.] : Molden, 1979. 360 S. 8°. 1. Aufl. OPpbd. (Leinenstruktur) mit SU.
201032941AHamburg, VSA-Verlag, 2010. 8°. 142 Seiten. Mit Abbildungen und Kartenskizzen. Original-Pappband. (Einband etwas berieben).
200512550Berlin, be.bra, 2005. Pappband, Schutzumschlag, 8°, 191 S., einige s/w Abbildungen; -sehr gutes Exemplar.
Original Wraps. 12mo. 235-260 [ie 25] pages. 19 cm. First separate edition. With frontispiece portrait of Kaufmann Kohler. Previously printed in the American Jewish Year Book, 28 (192627) , 23560. Laudatory biography of the life and thought of Kaufmann Kohler (1843-1926) after his passing; written by Hyman Enelow (1877-1934) a long time friend of the Kohler family and a posthumous editor of certain of Kaufmann Kohler's works. Subjects: Kohler, Kaufmann, 1843-1926. OCLC lists 3 copies (NYPL, HUC, Amsterdam) . Wraps bumped and soiled, with top edge of wrap chipped; bumped throughout, but clean and fresh. Good condition. (AMR-46-1)
Softbound. 4to. 146 pages. 28 cm. First edition. "Produced and published on the occasion of the exhibition Daring to Resist: Jewish Defiance in the Holocaust by the Museum of Jewish Heritage-A Living Memorial to the Holocaust, New York, NY, April 2007-July 2008." Publishers description: This important companion book challenges the stereotypical view that Jews were passive victims of Nazi oppression. Highlighting the themes of the exhibition, this unique compilation of more than thirty memoirs, oral histories, and letters - some published for the first time in English - documents from a Jewish perspective the vitality and resilience of Jewish life under Nazi oppression. The collection also includes original and thought provoking essays by exhibition curator Yitzchak Mais, Holocaust scholar David Engel, and psychologist Eva Fogelman, all of whom offer new insights about this important chapter of Jewish history. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Exhibitions. World War, 1939-1945 - Underground movements - Exhibitions. Near fine condition. (HOLO2-97-38)
First edition. Original green boards with illustrated blue dust jacket with green abstract image. 8vo. 399 pages; 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to On the Way with the Saving Remnant. Includes several black-and-white photographs. SUBJECT (S) : Lithuanian Jews, Holocaust, Personal narratives, Vilnius, Biography. Some dampstaining. Some edgewear to jacket. Very minimal markings. Slight toning to pages. Very good condition. (HOLO2-134-25)
Hardcover, 348 pages, 8vo, 23 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Psychological aspects. Children of Holocaust survivors -- Psychology. Holocaust. Overlevenden. Includes bibliographical references. Fading to cover. In dust jacket. Good condition. (Holo2-19-10)
Original Publishers Cloth. 8vo. Xi, 442 pages, 111 pages ports. 25cm. Hertz (18721946) was the chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the British Commonwealth and a powerful advocacy of Zionism. He fought courageously against Nazism and its echoes in England and strongly criticized the policies adopted by the Mandatory government in Palestine, which he visited frequently. CONTENTS: The Chief Rabbi, by Ephraim Levine. --Talmud manuscripts and editions, by E. N. Adler. --Gnostic themes in rabbinic cosmology, by AlexanderAltmann. --Joseph da Veiga and stock exchange operations in the seventeenth century, by M. B. Amzalak. --Jewish languages, by Salomo Birnbaum. --The ethics of the rabbis, by Abraham Cohen. --The chief rabbis of Vilna, by Israel Cohen. --The meaning of "sacrifices" in the Psalms, by Samuel Daiches. --Collatio 2.6.5., by David Daube. The so-called "science" movements and their relation to Judaism, by Bernard Drachman. --The conception of the Commandments of the Torah in Aaron Halevi's Sefer ha-hinnuk, by Isidore Epstein. --Incunables about Jews and Judaism, by Aron Freimann. --Popular proverbs in the Jerusalem Talmud, by J. H. Greenstone. --Fasts and fasting, by A. W. Greenup. --Elisha ben Abujah, by R. T. Herford. --The fantastic career of Joshua Abraham Norton, by Louis Hermann. SUBJECT(S) : Jewish literature. Judaism. Littérature juive. Judaïsme. Judentum. Hertz, Joseph H. (Joseph Herman) , 1872-1946. Very good condition. (FEST-1-15).
Original Publishers Cloth. 8vo. Xi, 442 pages, 111 pages ports. 25cm. Hertz (18721946) was the chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the British Commonwealth and a powerful advocacy of Zionism. He fought courageously against Nazism and its echoes in England and strongly criticized the policies adopted by the Mandatory government in Palestine, which he visited frequently. CONTENTS: The Chief Rabbi, by Ephraim Levine. --Talmud manuscripts and editions, by E. N. Adler. --Gnostic themes in rabbinic cosmology, by AlexanderAltmann. --Joseph da Veiga and stock exchange operations in the seventeenth century, by M. B. Amzalak. --Jewish languages, by Salomo Birnbaum. --The ethics of the rabbis, by Abraham Cohen. --The chief rabbis of Vilna, by Israel Cohen. --The meaning of "sacrifices" in the Psalms, by Samuel Daiches. --Collatio 2.6.5., by David Daube. The so-called "science" movements and their relation to Judaism, by Bernard Drachman. --The conception of the Commandments of the Torah in Aaron Halevi's Sefer ha-hinnuk, by Isidore Epstein. --Incunables about Jews and Judaism, by Aron Freimann. --Popular proverbs in the Jerusalem Talmud, by J. H. Greenstone. --Fasts and fasting, by A. W. Greenup. --Elisha ben Abujah, by R. T. Herford. --The fantastic career of Joshua Abraham Norton, by Louis Hermann. SUBJECT(S) : Jewish literature. Judaism. Littérature juive. Judaïsme. Judentum. Hertz, Joseph H. (Joseph Herman) , 1872-1946. Inscription on title page, bookplate on inside cover. Some staining to spine. Otherwise very good condition. (FEST-1-15a).
Original Publishers Cloth. 8vo. Xi, 442 pages, 111 pages ports. 25cm. Hertz (18721946) was the chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the British Commonwealth and a powerful advocacy of Zionism. He fought courageously against Nazism and its echoes in England and strongly criticized the policies adopted by the Mandatory government in Palestine, which he visited frequently. CONTENTS: The Chief Rabbi, by Ephraim Levine. --Talmud manuscripts and editions, by E. N. Adler. --Gnostic themes in rabbinic cosmology, by AlexanderAltmann. --Joseph da Veiga and stock exchange operations in the seventeenth century, by M. B. Amzalak. --Jewish languages, by Salomo Birnbaum. --The ethics of the rabbis, by Abraham Cohen. --The chief rabbis of Vilna, by Israel Cohen. --The meaning of "sacrifices" in the Psalms, by Samuel Daiches. --Collatio 2.6.5., by David Daube. The so-called "science" movements and their relation to Judaism, by Bernard Drachman. --The conception of the Commandments of the Torah in Aaron Halevi's Sefer ha-hinnuk, by Isidore Epstein. --Incunables about Jews and Judaism, by Aron Freimann. --Popular proverbs in the Jerusalem Talmud, by J. H. Greenstone. --Fasts and fasting, by A. W. Greenup. --Elisha ben Abujah, by R. T. Herford. --The fantastic career of Joshua Abraham Norton, by Louis Hermann. SUBJECT(S) : Jewish literature. Judaism. Littérature juive. Judaïsme. Judentum. Hertz, Joseph H. (Joseph Herman) , 1872-1946. Inscription on title page, bookplate on inside cover. Some staining to spine. Otherwise very good condition. (FEST1-15a).
Paper Wraps. Stapled. 27 cm. 24 pages. In French. Several articles dealing with Nazism and anti-Semitism in contemporary Europe (the editor was a leading Jewish socialist of the time) . Founded by activists who left the Democratic Communist Circle, Le Combat Marxiste was published monthly from 1933-1936 and called for a regeneration of the Socialist Party. Contents of this issue include: "Les divers aspects de l'Etat en regime capitaliste, " J. Haver; "Le probleme du fascisme, " Th. Pechy; "Le stakhanovisme, " A. Yougov; "L'antisemitisme contemporain et les 'Protocoles des sages de Sion', " B. Nicolaevsky; "Le sionisme, agent de Hitler?" J. Peskine. OCLC lists no copies. Covers and first page are detached but present. Chipping at edges, 1 rip to corner of cover. Margin notes and underlining on several pages. Pages are fragile but all text is clear. Good condition. (HOLO2-39-6)