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Paper Wraps. 8vo. 40 pages [161-200]. 21 cm. Die Weltbühne was the key forum of expression for leftist, socialist intellectuals during the Weimar Republic. Banned by the Nazis after the Reichstag fire, it was printed in exile from 1933 as Die Neue Weltbühne. Inhalt: "Vor der Frühjahrsoffensive, " "Strafgesetzentwurf und Sozialdemokratie, " "Christen und Juden. " Covers detached but present; back cover chipping at edge. Internal pages are darkened but all text is clear and binding is secure. Good condition. (HOLO2-45-9)
Softcover, 179 pages, illustrated, 8vo, 24 cm. In German. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish students -- Germany -- Frankfurt am Main -- Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Germany -- Frankfurt am Main -- Personal narratives. Schools -- Germany -- Frankfurt am Main. OCLC lists 14 copies worldwide. Light wear to edges. Folding mark on cover. Otherwise, very good condition. (Holo2-20-3)
Original wraps. 8vo. 246, [2] pages. 23 cm. Serial publication. In Hungarian, with Yiddish. OMZSA Yearbook. The Országos Magyar Zsidó Segíto Akció (National Hungarian Jewish Aid Association; OMZSA) was a general assistance organization for the large Budapest community. The OMZSA was involved with cultural, legal, and economic battles on behalf of the (religious) Jewish Budapest community. For example, a series of drawings by the artist Imre Amos (1907-1945) entitled Zsidó ünnepek (Jewish Holidays) , representing the Jewish holidays in the shadow of annihilation, became emblematic for Hungarian Jewry. (The series appeared in 150 copies published in 1940 by the Országos Magyar Zsidó Segito Akció [National Hungarian Jewish Aid Action]. ) (YIVO encyclopedia) . According to OCLC, four issues of the yearbook are known to exist (the earliest issue is titled OMZSA Naptár OMZSA Calendar) . This issue contains a calendar of the days and holidays for the year (In Hungarian and Yiddish) , and extensive literary (poems, letters, short stories) and journalistic pieces by dozens of writers and editors from the Budapest community. For many of these authors, this would be their last published work. [T]he Germans occupied the country on 19 March 1944, Gestapo chief Adolf Eichmann set up his SS command in Budapest, and the Budapest Jewish Council was established. What had been an extended process of stigmatization, ghettoization, deportation, and murder elsewhere was greatly concentrated and executed with great efficiency and speed in Hungary. The deportation and gassing of almost 440, 000 provincial Jews at Auschwitz-Birkenau began in mid-May and was swiftly accomplished by July as a result of full cooperation of the Hungarian authorities. Only intense diplomatic pressure threatening harsh postwar retribution caused Regent Horthy to call a halt to the deportations on 6 July, giving Budapest Jewry a temporary reprieve. In Budapest, a series of measures increasingly placed limitations on Jews who remained in the capital. Restrictions were placed on using the public transport; later telephones, bicycles, and cars were confiscated, and an evening curfew was imposed. From 3 April, all persons defined as Jews were obligated to wear a yellow star on their outer clothing The reverses suffered by the Germans emboldened Horthy to announce in mid-October his intention to withdraw Hungary from the war. With German backing, Ferenc Szálasi and his Arrow Cross Party seized power on 15 October. Budapests Jews were now threatened by a far more vicious regime whose radical antisemitic ideology was wholly in tune with Hitlers apocalyptic vision. Forced death marches began on 20 October and along with German deportations, affected some 75, 000 Budapest Jews. The city rapidly descended into chaos as roving Arrow Cross bands combed the streets rounding up Jews. The first murders in the streets began on 12 November; the first executions took place by the riverbank on 23 November. (YIVO Encyclopedia) Subjects: Jews - Hungary - Periodicals. Jewish almanacs. OCLC lists 7 copies. Wraps lightly worn, with light pencil marks on front cover and first endpage. Pages lightly aged, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-103-36)
Paper wrappers, 8vo, 32 pages, no copies on OCLC, covers slightly scratched, inner-pages clean, overall very good condition. Scarce (HOLO2-89-95)
(FT) Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 54 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Title page in English: The life and writings of Dr. Philip Friedman: short bio-bibliographical survey. This memorial work outlines the biography and writings of the holocaust survivor and historian Dr. Phillip Friedman. From the Yivo Major Collections description of his work: Historian Philip Friedman collected documentation on the Holocaust and wrote extensively on the subject. He served as the first director of the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland in the post-war period, as consultant to the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal, and as director of the YIVO-Yad Vashem bibliographical series on the Holocaust. His papers include eyewitness accounts collected from Holocaust survivors by the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland. From a New York Times Article (Holocaust Historian written by Lucy S. Dawidowicz; January 11, 1981) : In July 1944 Philip Friedman was one of a mere thousand survivors of the 150, 000 Jews of his native Lvov. Before the war he had already become known as a historian of Polish Jewry, but thenceforth, until his death in New York at 59 in 1960, he dedicated himself to the history of the Jews in that crucible of death which we now call the holocaust. [ ] Philip Friedman has rightfully been called the father of holocaust history. Except for Emanuel Ringelblum, who did not survive the war, Friedman was the first to organize the collecting of records about Jewish life and death under German wartime occupation. Friedman stimulated survivors to write memoirs and urged them to gather letters, photographs, relics and any remains that would serve future historians. Subjects: Friedman, Philip, 1901-1960. Friedman, Philip, 1901-1960 - Bibliography. OCLC lists 20 copies worldwide. Light soiling to covers, with small chip to edge of back cover; lightly soiled outer edges. Otherwise fresh and clean. Good + condition. (HOLO2-99-42)
Original Softcover. 8vo. 82 pages. Illus. 20 cm. In the original Danish. First edition. First person account of Melanie Oppenhejm who, after helping to save many Jewish childrens lives by helping them flee to Denmark, was captured by Nazi forces and sent to Theresienstadt. Title translates to English as, Man Trap: On Life in the Concentration Camp Theresienstadt. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Denmark -- Personal narratives. Jews -- Denmark -- Biography. Named Person: Oppenhejm, Mélanie. Named Corp: Theresienstadt (Concentration camp) . Geographic: Denmark -- Ethnic relations. OCLC lists ten copies worldwide. Some wear to cover. Internal pages are nice and clean; binding is tight. Very good condition. (HOLO2-77-57)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 96 pages. 23 cm. In German. Weimar-era philosemitic call for justice and calling on Germans and Jews to work together (though, of course, they are seen as distinct) . SUBJECT(S) : Jewish Question. Backstrip has tears at top and bottom, title page is torn and reattached with tape. Internal pages are nice and clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-45-1) .
Original Cloth. 8vo. 311 pages. 21 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Title page verso: When Poland fell; Ven Poiln is gefaln. Inscribed by Joseph Opatoshu on title page in Yiddish, dated Junet 1943. In the light of the destruction of practically all the great centers of Jewish life in Eastern Europe, the desire to record what can be remembered of a life that may never return, before memory of the past and recent past is completely blotted out, can be readily understood. In this category can be placed Opatoshu's 'When Poland Fell, ' a collection of stories of the years 1939-40 when Poland fell and with it Polish Jewry - American Jewish Year Book, 5704, pg 115. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Fiction. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Light soiling to cloth and outer edges, otherwise very fresh. Very good + condition. An important early Holocaust novel, here inscribed. (HOLO2-117-44)
Paper Wraps. 4to. Most issues are 28 pages. 6 issues total Holocaust era. Contains articles in French, English and German. Includes: 9m Annee, No 7/8. Oct-Novembre 1934. No 9, Decembre 1934; 10e Annee, No 4, Avril 1934; No 5-9 (single issue) , Septembre 1935; No 10, Octobre 1935; 12e Annee (single issue) , Aout 1937. Contents Includes: "Die biologische Zukunft der deutschen Juden; " "The Effect of Unemployment on Children and young People in France; " "Zum Rassenproblem; " Program for the organizations Fourth Annual Conference in December 1934; "La lutte contre la tuberculose parmi les Juifs en Pologne; " "Le service medical parmi les Juifs de Galicie et de Roumanie de la 1e moitie du 19e siecle; " "Jewish Health organisation of GB; " "Le situation de la population enfantine juive et l'activite de l'OSE et de la TOZ; " "Die Problematik der Rassetheorie; " "Pour la protection de la sante de la population juive a Paris; " "Le Congres mondial des Medecins Juifs en Palestine; " "Le Service Sanitaire en Palestine; " "L'Evolution de la Medecine et les Medecins Juifs a Vienne; " "Problemes de la race et de la psychotherapie dans leur rapport particulier avec la psychotherapie des nevroses chez les Juifs; " "En faveur de l'enfance et de la jeunesse juives en France. " SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Health and hygiene -- Periodicals. Jews -- France -- Periodicals. OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide, but unable to confirm that these specific issues are included. Issues are darkened and lightly stained with some bending at corners, but all text is clear. Two issues have detached, but present, covers. One volume has some underlining on several pages. All issues in original wrappers with secure bindings. Five volumes in very good condition; one in good condition. (HOLO2-51-10).
Original paper wrappers, 4to, 180 pages; 29 cm. With errata slip present. In Yiddish. All three authors were survivors; published amid the rubble of post-war Poland as Jewish life was being rebuilt there. Not the more common 1946 work of the same title with far fewer pages and different editorship. SUBJECT (S) : Yiddish literature -- Poland. OCLC-Worldcat lists 11 copies worldwide. Light wear, Very Good Condition (Holo2-125-42)
8vo; First edition. Original boards. 8 vo, 342 pages TTitle translates to In the Years of the Jewish Holocaust: The Voice of the Underground Alliance. SUBJECTS: World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Poland. OCLC: 7409650. Cloth lightly worn. Very good condition. (HOLO2-147-41-ABELX+)
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 12 pages ; 22cm. In English and Hebrew on opposite pages. In December 1942 Jewish communities in 30 countries worldwide held a day of fasting for the Jewish victims of the ongoing Nazi massacres across Europe. This is the official service published by the Office of the Chief Rabbi for use on this historic day of Fasting in the United Kingdom. The British fast took place 4 days before the British and American governments issued The Joint Declaration by Members of the United Nations condemning the ongoing events of the Holocaust. OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide (Harvard, LBI, ULondon, British Lib, NLI, Senckenberg) only 2 in the United States Small stain on cover margin and at staples, Very Good- Condition. (HOLO2-130-26)
First edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 2 pages; 22 cm. In Hebrew and English. The prayer service takes place in the midst of the war, just weeks after Churchill became Prime Minister of Great Britain and weeks before France surrendered to Germany. The war was not going well for the Allied Forces. SUBJECT (S) : Prayer, WWII, Holocaust. OCLC lists 3 holdings worldwide (Harvard, National Libr of Israel, British Libr) , only one in the US. Very minimal edgewear. Slight toning. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-134-67)
Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 8 pages; 22 cm. In Hebrew and English. At this point in March, 1941, the bombings on London had become increasingly devastating, including one on March 8th that hit Buckingham Palace and on March 19th that was the worst so far of that year. Hitler had given orders to expand Auschwitz and President Franklin D. Roosevelt had signed the Lend-Lease Act. SUBJECT (S) : Prayer, WWII, Great Britain. OCLC lists 1 holding worldwide (National Libr of Israel) . Minimal edgewear. Minimal markings. Slight toning. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-134-70)
First edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 16 pages; 22 cm. In Hebrew and English. With a supplication for surviving brethren in and from Nazi land, a prayer for the king and the royal family, and prayers for the victims of the war. O God, Who art full of compassion, Who dwellest on high, grant perfect rest beneath the shelter of Thy Divine Presence to the men, women and children who have been slain in vast multitudes, and with appalling cruelties. Shuddering seizeth us when we remember the annihilation of hundreds of holy communities, and recall the murderous decree to destroy, to slay, and to cause to perish, all Jews, both young and old, women and little children, in the lands that are under the heel of arrogant iniquity. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Prayers, WWII. OCLC lists 6 holdings worldwide. Some toning. Very minimal edgewear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-134-66)
Augsburg, Kyrios-Verlag, 1964. Paper Wrapper. Small 8 vo. 51 pages. In German. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide (Harvard Univ Divinity Sch Libr, Harvard Univ Col Libr, Lenoir-Rhyne Col Carl A Rudisill Libr, Aristotle Univ of Thessaloniki, Jewish Nat & Univ Libr ) . Signed by author with dedication to previous owner. Some ink stains on front cover. Includes small sheet with note from author. Very small tear to front cover. Otherwise in Very Good condition. (H2-3-2).
19596785ABBerlin, Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, (1959). 8°. 142 S. Roter Original-Leinenband mit goldgeprägtem Deckel- und Rückentitel und typographisch gestaltetem OUmschlag.
195959978ABBerlin, Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, (1959). 8°. 142 S. Roter Original-Leinenband mit goldgeprägtem Deckel- und Rückentitel und typographisch gestaltetem OUmschlag.
Softcover, 109 pages, 8vo, 21 cm. Fundamentalist Christian description of the role of the Holocaust, Jewish suffering, and the establishment of the Jewish state in the second coming of Jesus. Important for understanding Fundamentalist Christian Philosemitism. Contents: Ancient Israel's role -- The Messianic hope -- Messiah, Son of David -- History before it happened -- A significant prophecy -- Prophetic highlights -- A day for a year -- Messiah "anointed" -- Messiah "cut off" -- The suffering Messiah -- Messiah as king. SUBJECT (S) : Messiah -- Prophecies. Bible. O. T. Daniel IX, 24-27 -- Criticism, interpretation, etc. Note(s) : Bibliography: p. 108-109.Good condition. (Holo2-16-21)
Mm 115x195 Collana "Schulim Vogelmann" - Volume in brossura originale, 120 pagine. Una leggera traccia di etichetta al piatto anteriore, peraltro buona copia. Spedizione in 24 ore dalla conferma dell'ordine.
(Firenze), Giuntina, (1989), in-16, br. edit., pp. 119, (5). Collana "Schulim Vogelmann", 22.
In 16°, brossura editoriale, pp. 119, (5); buon esemplare. (YD3/B) 8885943497 (YD3/B)
14357Mercure de France - Récit - 1983 - In-8, broché, couverture souple sobrement illustrée en bas de plat ( enfant grave ), 157 pages-5f, bel exemplaire .
Original Publishers Cloth. 8vo. 314 pages. 22 cm. First American Edition. Fiction. On the morning of the Allied victory in Europe at the end of the Second World War, the Polish inmates of a slave labor camp at Papenburg, near the Dutch border of Germany, exultantly throw off their shackles. The Camp of All Saints becomes, overnight, an island of victors in the ocean of defeated Germany. This is their last victory. Wild rejoicing is followed by a saturnalia of reprisals when by rape, plunder, torture and murder the Poles exact vengeance from their former captors. Then the victors relapse into the quiescent servility of the stateless, to wait vainly for visas to a new life. And the Germans, technically defeated, flourish while the DPs at the camp despair. jacket. Translated by Norbert Guterman. Very Good Condition in like jacket. A beautiful copy. (HOLO2-93-10)
71566Paris/Bruxelles, Editions La Longue Vue, 2000. 15 x 23, 230 pp., quelques illustrations, broché, bon état (couverture défraîchie, annotations sur la page de faux-titre).