2 488 résultats
1st edition, original paper wrappers. 8vo, 8 pages. A sermon preached on New Years Morning, Saturday, September 8th, 1945 before Congregation Keneseth Israel of Allentown, Pennsylvania by Rabbi Braunstein, Ph. D. This sermon was preached before the release on Sept. 30, 1945 of Earl G. Harrisons Report to President Truman on the conditions of refugees and displaced persons in western Europe, and of the subsequent interchange of correspondence between the President and General Eisenhower. All of these strengthen and confirm the point-of-view expressed in this sermon. (page 8) Braunstein doesnt think that the Jews who fled should have to go back to their former homes. He says, The Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees, of which our Government is a member, recently declared that the Jewish D. P. will be given the opportunity to learn more about conditions in his country and give the governments more time to satisfy their nationals that they can return to their countries with the prospect of leading a healthy, normal life before reaching the conclusion that the person must be treated permanently as non-repatriable. These are elegant words to conceal the real decision of the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees. That decision is this: Let the Jews cool off their heels in the German concentration camps until they realize they must return to their former homes. The simplest truth is that these Jews are afraid to return to their former homes. They who have cheated death for so many years at the hands of the Germans do not want to die at the hands of the Germans, do not want to die at the hands of their former co-citizens. And if their experiences in Poland and in Slovakia and elsewhere are any indication of how the wind is blowing, they have a right to fear. They have a right to refuse to return to their former homes. I have been wondering whether the late President Roosevelts promise of a world in which there would be freedom from fear will ever have meaning to the displaced Jews of Europe. (page 6) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC: 992671406, OCLC lists two copies worldwide ( Harvard, NLI) . Slight wear to rear cover, Very Good Condition Overall. Rare and important (HOLO2-144-16)
1st Edition. Original Illustrated Paper Wrappers depicting a barbed wire fence. 34 pages, plus 8 pages of photo plates; 18 cm. In Dutch. Title translates into English as, Concentration Camps. Scarce early photo report on Nazi camps. Sections include, From the Diary of a Prisoner, The Pernicious Spirit, and Facts and Numbers. OCLC lists just 5 copies worldwide, none outside the Low Countries. Some edgewear. Good+ condition. (holo2-130-63)
1st edition. Original Paper Wrappers, 4to, 48 pages. Photographic illustrations. The National Conference on Palestine took place on March 9, 1944 in Washington D. C. At the Statler Hotel, wherein influential American Christians rallied in support of Palestine as a national home and democratic commonwealth for the Jewish People. Speakers included Harvard University professor Carl J. Friedrich and future-New York City mayor Robert F. Wagner who attacked the British White Paper of 1939 as "Palestine's Munich. Stamp on cover, Very Good Condition. (kh-5-54)
Original Cloth. 12mo. 120, 194, 194 pages. 18 cm. Survivors Bible, printed by Vaad Hatzala. Pentateuch, Haftarot and Megilot with commentary of Rashi and Targum. 'Matanah me-et Va'ad ha-hatsalah le-she'erit ha-peletah. ' Title page has coloured illustration. With dedication page to President Harry Truman with superimposed American Flag. "The remnants of Israel that survived the great destruction wrought upon our people by Hitler's hoards, these shattered remenats the 'Sherith Hepleita' were weakened physically and spiritually...we wish to dedicate this Holy Bible, the very ancient well of civilization, to his Honor, the President of the United States of America, Harry S. Truman. His courageous and kind words, his noble acts and deeds in behalf of our people have served as a ray of hote in these trying, troubleed and most cdritical period of our people..." Subjects: Haftarot - Commentaries. Bible. Pentateuch - Commentaries. Bible. Five Scrolls - Commentaries. Pentateuch. Hebrew. 1947.; Holy Bible: Vaad Hatzala, Germany. OCLC: 506554087. OCLC lists 15 copies. A copy sold at auction in 2021 for over $1200. Light wear to boards, rear board replaced, rebacked with new corners, endpages repaired, Good condition. (HOLO2-117-58A)
1st edition. Original Boards, 4to. Xiv, 229 pages. 29 cm. First Edition. Inscribed by author in Hebrew on front endpaper. English interspersed with Hebrew and other exotic alphabets. The Son of a Shinto priest and descendant from a long line of Shinto priests, the author Abram Kotsuji (1899-1973) was a Japanese Hebraist and ardent philo-Semite who founded the Institute of Biblical Research at the University of Tokyo. The present work is his Phd dissertation. During the Holocaust years Kotsuji greatly assisted the hundreds of rabbis and yeshiva students from Eastern Europe (including the entire Mir Yeshiva) who escaped before the German onslaught to Kobe, Japan and later to Japanese-occupied Shanghai. In 1959 Kotsuji formally converted to Judaism in Jerusalem. Internally some age toning but very clean.Very Good Condition. (HOLO-114-17a)
No Date (1939? ) . 1st edition. 1 leaf brochure, folded in half, [4] pages. 10 photographs throughout. Likely published in 1939. The front page features the headline IT HAPPENED IN AMERICA, and under it a picture of people saluting the American and Nazi flags. That is captioned 20,000 NAZIS SALUTE SWASTIKA. Also on that page is In 1939, thousands of Bund members and their friends gathered in Madison Square Garden to sing their hymn of hate against democracy. Religious freedom, racial brotherhood, everything Americans hold dear was attacked. Our President was subjected to a stream of vilification. Hitler alone received cheers. There is a report on the Council Against Intolerance in Americas Independence Day Ceremony which took place on July 4, 1939. On the back there is a form to donate money to the Council Against Intolerance in America, to defend the American tradition of religious freedom and human equality. Very rare, no copies on OCLC Folded in thirds horizontally, as issued. Paper is slightly crinkled in places, on the back there is a small piece of tape stuck and a small place where a layer of paper was pulled off. Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-144- 20)
Original Wraps. 12mo. 15 pages. 19 cm. First edition. A Soviet war news pamphlet. Price 2d. CPS 25277 on rear wrap. Contains Decree of the Supreme Soviet for establishing the Extraordinary State Commission to investigate Nazi Atrocities; and April 6, 1943 'Statement by the Extraordinary Commission for the Ascertainment and Investigation of Crimes of the German-Fascist Invaders and their Associates, on Outrages against Citizens and Damage to Collective Farms, Public Organisations, State Enterprises and Institutions of the U. S. S. R. In the towns of Vyazma, Gzhatsk and Sychevka, Smolensk region, and in the town of Rzhev, Kalinin region. ' The Statement contains numerous firsthand source material on atrocities and murders in these regions, abduction for slave labor in Germany, wholesale destruction of towns, museums, etc. Mass shootings; contains a list of German officers responsible for these crimes. The Extraordinary State Commission was established on 2 November 1942, by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, for officially 'investigating the Crimes of the GermanFascist Aggressors' and their allies, and was the major official body for recording and documenting Nazi war crimes and pillage. The Reports of the Commission comprised major evidential material presented at the Nuremberg trials and the Japanese war criminals' trials. The reports appeared in English in the daily publication Soviet War News issued by the Press Department of the Soviet Embassy in London. Subjects: Atrocities - Soviet Union - History - 20th century. World War, 1939-1945 - Soviet Union. Atrocities. German Occupation of Soviet Union (1941-1944) World War (1939-1945) Soviet Union - History - German occupation, 1941-1944. OCLC lists 4 copies (Florida, Oxford, Northwestern, Swansea) , none in the Northeast. Light wear to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. Scarce and Important. (HOLO2-123-51)
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 119 pages. 22 cm. First Edition. In Dutch and English. Title translates as, Dutch Nationals Found In German Camps. First list of Dutch deportees and concentration camp survivors released by G. F. Ferwerda, Netherlands Commissioner for Repatriation. Lists of deportees, liberated from concentration-, and internment-camps only will be circularized by my London office from time to time. The lists are obtained from various sources and the identity of the persons concerned cannot always be checked without further investigation. It is, therefore, pointed out that the lists are of a provisional character, that in the confused state of affairs, existing in Germany, mistakes are unavoidable and the accuracy can in no way be guaranteed. (Preface) Subjects: Holocaust Concentration Camps. Repatriation. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide. (Netherlands Institute for War Documentation) Back wrapper detached. Previous marks from tape near back strip. Spined repaired. Shows edgewear and age toning. Good +condition. (HOLO-114-1)
Later Boards. 8vo. 308, [2], [14] pages. 22 cm. First edition. First appearance. In Polish. With 14 pages of photographs at rear. Includes 100 pages of documents (nazi directives relating to the camps) . With summaries in French, Russian, and English outlining the history of Oswiecim. Contains preface from Waclaw Barcikowski, Friedman's 'To Jest Oswiecim', and 'Grupa Oswiecim' by noted poet, novelist and publicist Tadeusz Holuj (resistance member, he was deported to Auschwitz; and later served as secretary general of the International Auschwitz Committee) . Philip Friedman (19011960) , Polish Jewish historian. Friedman survived the Holocaust by hiding in Poland, but he lost his wife and a daughter. After 1944, he was appointed director of the Central Jewish Historical Commission (created by the Central Committee of Jews in Poland) , whose mission was to gather data on Nazi war crimes. In this capacity he not only collected testimonies and documentation but also supervised the publication of a number of pioneering studies, including his own on the concentration camp at Auschwitz. This work, To jest Oswiecim, was published in Warsaw in 1945 and appeared in an abridged English version as This Is Oswiecim (1946) . (Yivo Encyclopedia) . Bound in attractive later marbled boards; original wraps absent. Subjects: Auschwitz (Concentration camp) . OCLC lists 15 copies. Pages aged, minor edge wear, otherwise clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-113-55)
Later Wraps (with original front wrapper mounted on front) . 8vo. 308, [2], [14] pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Polish. With 14 pages of photographs at rear. Includes 100 pages of documents (nazi directives relating to the camps) . With summaries in French, Russian, and English outlining the history of Oswiecim. Contains preface from Waclaw Barcikowski, Friedman's 'To Jest Oswiecim', and 'Grupa Oswiecim' by noted poet, novelist and publicist Tadeusz Holuj (resistance member, he was deported to Auschwitz; and later served as secretary general of the International Auschwitz Committee) . Philip Friedman (1901-1960) , Polish Jewish historian. "Friedman survived the Holocaust by hiding in Poland, but he lost his wife and a daughter. After 1944, he was appointed director of the Central Jewish Historical Commission (created by the Central Committee of Jews in Poland) , whose mission was to gather data on Nazi war crimes. In this capacity he not only collected testimonies and documentation but also supervised the publication of a number of pioneering studies, including his own on the concentration camp at Auschwitz. This work, To jest Oswiecim, was published in Warsaw in 1945 and appeared in an abridged English version as This Is Oswiecim (1946) . " (Yivo Encyclopedia) . Subjects: Auschwitz (Concentration camp) . OCLC lists 15 copies. Rebacked in later thick wraps, with original wrap pastedown. Lightly bumped edges, lightly aged; overall fresh and clean. Good + condition. (HOLO2-117-1) xx
1st edition, original paper wrappers, 8vo, 183 pages illustrations, portraits, maps 22 cm. In Swedish. Title translates to Red Cross Expedition to Germany. Sven Frykman, the author, was a major involved in the famous white busses operation. The operation, run by the Swedish Red Cross and the Danish government, rescued inmates from concentration camps in places under Nazi control and transported them to Sweden. SUBJECT (S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Prisoners and prisons, German. OCLC: 22123343. OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. Some wear and staining on the cover, spine is fixed with tape and is chipped, Otherwise Very Good (Holo2-139-3)
First edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 12 pages; 21 cm. Very early (1941) use of the term saving remnant to describe what would be left of Jewry following the unfolding Holocaust in Europe, a reference to Genesis 45: 7, sometimes translated as: God sent me before you to preserve for you a remnant in the earth, and to keep you alive by a great deliverance. Holocaust-era speech delivered by Dr. Israel Goldstein, rabbi and president of the JNF, encouraging donations to expand settlements in Palestine to make room for WWII refugees when the war ends. What a great privilege, and what a tremendous responsibility is ours-ours, Oh, American Israel-to lay broad foundations for our peoples future! It is our responsibility because it is our good fortune, by grace of numbers, security and wealth, to be the saving remnant of our people. Presented just after the death of Louis D. Brandeis, Goldstein also reviews the accomplishments of the JNF over its 40 year history. Encourages SUBJECT(S) : Zionism, Jewish National Fund. OCLC lists 1 holding worldwide (Univ of Minnesota) . Some browning to pages and minimal edgewear. Very good- condition. Scarce. (zion-12-49)xx
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo, 31 pages. An american rabbi's eerily prescient 1933 report from very early in the Nazi period in Germany. Isserman, the author, was the Rabbi of Temple Israel, St. Louis, Missouri. He was born in Antwerp, and immigrated with his family to the United States in 1906. He was ordained by Hebrew Union College and served the rabbinate in St. Louis for many decades. He participated in many civic and Jewish causes and visited Nazi Germany three times (1933, 1935 and 1937) - the first visit of which prompted the present document, in which he states there is no hope for the Jews of Germany - the government aim is their human extirpation (p. 3). His stated conclusions are that there is no hope for the Jews of Germany, that atrocities were perpetrated on Jews and other dissenters and will continue to be perpetrated, that an economic death sentence has been passed on the Jews of Germany, that only the fear of public and foreign opinion is preventing a pogrom against all the Jews of Germany, and that the Jews of Germany live under a sentence of death. Subjects: Jews -- Germany. Persecutions. OCLC: 5139787, OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide. Some tearing around staples on cover, repaired. Small tear on top of page 9, writing not affected. Few corrections to text, likely by the author. Good Condition Overall. (HOLO2-144-26)
1ST Separate Edition. Original paper outside pages, no cover, as issued. 8vo booklet, 11+[1] pages. Reprinted from the Soviet Information Bulletin in Washington. Includes article Jew Baiting Must Be Wiped Out: No Mercy for Murderers, by Komarov, who was the most respected name in systematic botany in the USSR, ex-president of the Academy of Sciences, a deputy of the Supreme Soviet, and holder of the highest Soviet civil award-a Hero of Socialist Labour. Also contains smaller sections Conference of European Jewry, Fight for Humanity, Meeting of Jewish Communists, French Jews Reorganise, and Commentary. The general theme is uniting forces and countries to fight against antisemitism. From Komarovs article, To keep silence about this is to deliver our children to death. In this matter, if any country gives shelter to the Hitlerites or their ideas, in the shape of discriminatory legislation in the shape of racial organisation or racial Press, it is no longer an internal affair of that country. If your neighbour uncloses in his backyard a container with poison gases which threaten to spread over the entire town, you will not waste time by asking for permission to enter his backyard, you will do so to avert death for thousands of people. Racial ideas are more dangerous than any poison gas. It is our generations duty to the future, to the cause of the progress of civilisation and humanity, not only to put out the smoking fire of Fascism but to uncover and extinguish every smouldering coal of it. (page [12]) Very rare, not listed on OCLC nor could we locate copies anywhere else. Some creases on pages from the time of printing. 2 small stains on back page, corners are slightly bent. Good Condition Overall. (HOLO2-144-21)
Publishers cloth. XIV, 86 pages. 1st edition. Shoshanna Rozen and Dori Ben Zev as Anna and Peter (text accompanying photo on cover) . "Privately published by the author for literary discussion"; Arranged by Batya Lancet and Peter Frye for the Israel Soldiers theatre, as directed by Peter Frye. Contains a long preface by Meyer Levin about the controversial history, in the face of copyright restrictions from Otto Frank, to perform this play, which apparently was a major success at its debut show in Israel. Contains the entire script for the play, adapted from the Diary of Anne Frank; 3 photographs from performances at the Israel Soldiers Theatre, and numerous reviews on back page. Subjects: Frank, Anne, 1929-1945 - Drama. OCLC lists 15 copies. Cover soiled with small pen mark on upper right page, pages lightly creased, otherwise fresh. Good + condition. Rare (HOLO2-103-22)
(FT) Paper Wrappers. 12mo. 19, [1] pages. 19 cm. In Yiddish. Numbered 0525 (of how many? ) , finely printed on letterpress in red and black ink; coptic (braided thread) binding with illustrated cover. Translates roughly as From One Mother to All the Mothers. Early Secular Yiddish tract on how to be a good mother. Subjects: Child rearing. Parenting. Child psychology. OCLC lists only two copies (Lib Congress, HUC) . Light soiling to covers, with outer edges lightly bumped and chipped. Internally clean and fresh. Very good condition. Scarce and interesting. (HOLO2-97-47)
1st edition. Original green paper wrappers, 12mo, 56 pages. Singerman 4882. In his early days in the United States, Isaac Moses "was considered a radical Reformer, but later he took a more moderate position. In 1884 he introduced his own prayer book (Tefillat Yisrael). Moses was a founding member of the Central Conference of American Rabbis and a member of the Reform committee charged with compiling an official prayer book. The appearance of the Union Prayer Book in 1894 has been credited to his personal initiative in preparing and circulating a manuscript when the committee's work seemed to be leading nowhere. Moses also published a number of sermons and textbooks for children. His Sabbath School Hymnal, first issued in 1894, ran into 14 editions. While in Milwaukee, he edited the weekly Der Zeitgeist (1880-82). " (encyclopedia.com) In one of these sermons, Rabbi Moses discusses the evils that occurred in Egypt and then goes on to say, "Does not out civilization show the most alarming symptoms of the evils and the diseases of Egypt? We have fought for the emancipation of the negro, but the enslavement of the masses by our modern indutrial system threatens to become a plague worse than ever befell the birth-place of Moses. " Subjects: Jewish sermons, American. English -- United States. OCLC: 25225212, Spine rebacked, coveres rubbed and worn, but solid. Good Condition Overall. Scarce. (AMR-57-6-BL).
1st seperate edition. Original orange paper covers, Softcover, 108 pages, 8vo. In German with Hebrew citations. Published during the Rohling-Bloch Affair. Rohling, (1839-1931) , was an "antisemitic polemicist. A fanatical ultramontanist priest from the Rhineland, Rohling published in 1871 his Der Talmudjude (based on J. A. Eisenmenger 's Entdecktes Judenthum) , a collection of deliberately corrupted quotations, imaginary statements, and forgeries against the Talmud. The book appeared in successive editions and became very popular. When Franz Holubek, a leader of the Viennese artisan movement, was sued for inciting a crowd against the Jews (April 4, 1882) , he pleaded not guilty, claiming that he had obtained his information in good faith from the books of Rohling, a full professor at the German University of Prague. Rohling's academic appointments were obtained through the intercession of high Church dignitaries. Holubek's acquittal was a victory for the growing political antisemitism. Rohling and his works acquired further notoriety through the Tiszaeszlar blood libel affair, when Rohling volunteered to testify that Jews required Christian blood for their ceremonies. After Franz Delitzsch , the renowned Protestant Orientalist, had revealed Rohling's ignorance and baseness, Rohling accused Delitzsch of being a Jew and then castigated Adolf Jellinek and Moritz Guedemann as cunning knaves for denying Holubek's charges. Rohling's challenger was Joseph Samuel Bloch who, after repeated sorties against him, published a series of articles in July 1883 under the title, "An Offer to Commit Perjury, " in which he branded Rohling a liar and perjurer. Forced by public opinion to sue Bloch for libel, Rohling enlisted the aid of two antisemites, Brimanus (a Romanian-Jewish renegade who had taught Rohling Hebrew and was author of the scurrilous Der Judenspiegel under the pseudonym "Justus") and Ecker (a convicted forger, priest, and professor at an obscure seminary in Paderborn) . Neither could attend the trial. Bloch recruited the respected Orientalists Theodor Noeldeke and Karl August Wuensche, who completely demolished all Rohling's academic pretenses. Even Paul Lagarde condemned Rohling's works. In 1885, shortly before the trial was due to open, Rohling withdrew his suit after Bloch had collected an immense amount of material against him. He paid the costs of the trial, lost his academic chair, and left the public scene, nevertheless continuing to publish antisemitic tracts. Rohling's Talmudjude was translated into several European languages; E. Drumont wrote the introduction to the French edition. The work continued to be published for more than 50 years, and served as a source for Nazi antisemitic doctrines" (EJ, 2007) . Hinge repair, lightly browned pages, with taped repair at spine. Chipping to edges of cover. Otherwise, very good condition. (BIB-15-29)
No Date (1943?) 1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo, 31 pages. Early (1943) expose and condemnation of Nazi atrocities in the occupied Soviet Union. Likely published 1943, as the end of the booklet says "(signed) Molotov// Moscow, May 11, 1943." Introduction by Jessica Smith. "With a dignity and restraint that seem almost superhuman this note by Foreign Commissar Molotov sets forth fresh proofs of the subhuman savagery of the Hitlerites. In previous notes to the United Nations Molotov has presented documentary evidence of the fiendish atrocities visited on Soviet citizens in the Nazi-occupied areas. In this one he gives details of the manner in which millions of Soviet citizens are driven into slaveryâ¦. As they systematically lay waste the Russian towns and villages during occupation or retreat, the German marauders simultaneously seek to enslave or destroy all of the Soviet people who fall into their clutches. The majority of able-bodied citizens, young and old, men and women, girls and boys, are forcibly shipped into Germany. Those who resist are murdered. The rest are packed like cattle into railroad cars. Those who sicken on the awful journey are thrown out. The railroad embankments are littered with their bodies all the way. " (from introduction) This note was sent to "all ambassadors and minsters of the countries with which the U. S. S. R. Maintains diplomatic relations. " Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities. OCLC: 5863608. Near Perfect, Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-145-2-AMP) xx
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 53 pages.. 1st issue, Published in exile by the heavily Jewish SPD, these monthly reports covered sociopolitical and economic conditions in Germany, and were harshly critical of the Nazi regime. CONTENTS: Factory Owners Uneasiness, The German Concentration Camps: Dachau, Lichtenburg, Sachsburg, Hamburg-Fuhlsbuttel, Womens Concentration Camp Moringen, House of Correctional Osterstein. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide (Staats & Universitatsbibliothek Hamburg, Univ m Hannnover & TIB, Universitatsbibliothek Oldenburg Ibit, Bibliothek Des Herder-Instituts, Universitatsbibliothek Passau) . Internal pages are lightweight, tissue-like paper. Some chipping at edges and tears on corners of covers, but all text is clear. Good condition. Extremely early discussion of the German concentration camps. (HOLO2-33-4)
First edition. Original illustrated blue paper wrappers. 8vo. 59 pages, 20 cm. In German with musical notations. Title translates to Ghetto and Concentration Camp Songs from Latvia and Lithuania. Fifteen songs each preceded by a brief historical extract. Collected and edited by Latvian-born Johanna (Lichtenberg) Spector (1915-2008) , who grew to achieve renown as an ethnomusicologist specializing in the documentation of the musical culture of varied Jewish communities around the world. SUBJECTS: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Songs and music. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. Minor shelf wear. Overall Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-131-28) xx
1st Edition. Later Wrappers with Original Paper Wrappers Bound Inside. 8vo. 24 pages ; 15 x 20 cm. In Czech. Title translates into English as, The Gentry-Volk: 11 Epigrams About The Teutonic Saviors Of The World. Published in the last year of the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, this book contains 11 outlandish caricatures of Nazi incompetence, and defeat, from the illustrator Josef Novák. The cover image is of a bird defecating on a Swastika SSI. SUBJECT (S) : Germany -- History -- 1933-1945 -- Humor, caricatures. OCLC lists just 4 copies worldwide (Hoover Institute, Yale, NL of Czech Republic, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek) . Slight wear to protective wrappers and a few minor discolorations and edge wear on Original Wrappers. Otherwise very good condition. (holo2-135-5)
(FT) Hardcover with dustjacket, 8vo, 2 Volumes, 572 pages (continuing page-count) , Illustrated. Inscribed by author. On the underground organization that helped Jewish refugees during World War II to escape to the British Mandate for Palestine. Aliyah Bet. Ex-library. Dustjackets have edgewear, overall very good condition in good attractive illustrated jackets. An attractive set of this important work. (HOLO2-89-92)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 354 pages. 25 cm. First edition. In Spanish, English, and French. Capacidad de la República dominicana para absorber refugiados, díctamen de la Comisión nombrada por el poder ejecutivo para el estudio del informe de la Brookings institution sobre 'La colonización de refugiados en la República dominicana. ' Capacity of the Dominican republic to absorb refugees ... Capacité de la République dominicaine pour absorber der refugiés. Trilingual report commissioned by the executive committee (Trujillo) of the Dominican Republic to study the Brookings Institution report on the capacity for the refugee settlement in the Dominican Republic. With maps, fold out statistic tables, and various charts. Subjects: Refugees - Dominican Republic. Brookings Institution. Refugee settlement in the Dominican republic. Light institutional pencil markings on endpages; spine split, edge wear to wraps, with some loss at edges, otherwise clean and fresh. Good condition. (HOLO2-115-53)
Publisher's cloth. 4to. 430, 396, 512 pages. Dust jackets. in Hebrew. Includes illustrations, maps, indexes. Title on title page verso: Lithuanian Jewry, Published by The Association of The Lithuanian Jews in Israel. Contents: Vol. II: Ha-Yehudim be-Lita me-1918 ad 1941 (Jews in Lithuania 1918-1941); Vol. III: Ha-Yehudim be-Lita Ha'atzma'it (Jews in Independent Lithuania); Vol. IV: Hurban Yahadut Lita (Destruction of Lithuanian Jewry). SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Lithuania. Vol. II slight water damage to endpages, slight tears to DJ, overall very good condition; Vol. III institutional marks on endpages, slight tears and boxing to DJ, overall very clean and fresh, very good condition; Vol. IV hinge and slight boxing to DJ, otherwise extremely clean, overall fine condition. A beautiful, informative and definitive set. (HOLO2-98-19B)