2 490 résultats
1st Edition. Original Wrappers. 8vo. 13 pages ; 21 cm. In Dutch. A very scarce post-Holocuast report on aid for Dutch survivors. Title translates into English as, Overview of Relief Lending to War Victims in the Hague. Compiled by the Office of the Social Council (Poverty Council) . OCLC lists only 1 copy worldwide (USHMM) . Library stamp and number on cover and titlepage, Otherwise Very Good condition. Rare. (HOLO2-135-87A)
(FT) Original Publishers Cloth. Folio. [104] pages. Illus. (some color) 33 cm. In Hebrew and English. Illustrated childrens haggadah; includes two-page black and white illustration depicting the Holocaust, with SS officers with whips, side by side with Jews slavery in Egypt with the caption, This Year Slaves. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Liturgy and ritual. Illustrated by Siegmund Forst. Music arranged by G. Ephros. (3 pages at end). Stains and marks on boards on several pages, internal hinge repair, still good. (HOLO2-70-13)
1st edition, original paper wrappers. 8vo, iv (English) + 27 (Hebrew) pages. In Hebrew with additional English abstract and title page. The Eichmann trial was one of the most important events in pre-1967 Israel. The article attempts to compare the reactions of two witnesses to the trial, Hannah Arendt and Haim Gouri, to the proceedings. These writers represent two conflicting perspectives- a Jewish-universalist one on the one hand, and a Jewish-Israeli one on the other .Interestingly, the insight of both Arendt and Gouri played a role in subverting the prevalent attitudes toward the memory of the Holocaust in Israeli society. While Arendts assertions became a basis of a tendency to universalize the Holocaust, removing it from a specific Jewish context, Gouris observations led to a strong identification with Diaspora Jewry. The Eichmann trial and the new perceptions in its wake marked the beginning of the decline of the concept of Negation of the Diaspora and the acceptance of the Holocaust as a major identity-forming factor in Israeli society. (from abstract) SUBJECT(S): War crime trials -- Jerusalem. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945). Eichmann, Adolf, Trials, litigation, etc. Arendt, Hannah-- Views on the Holocaust. Gouri, Haim, Middle East -- Jerusalem. OCLC: 50757632. Near Perfect Condition. Very Good++ (HOLO2-159-41-ALXZ)
In period Spring Binder. 4to. [Various paginations]. 30 cm. First edition. Report detailing and classifying the professions of Jewish workers in New York City. Includes many German-Jewish refugees. Data is estimated and sourced from census and trade union records, and for use in connection with Jewish economic services in New York City. In 1933, Abraham Shohan a former overseas field executive of the Joint Distribution Committee, [was] appointed national field director of the B'nai B'rith Wider Scope Fund. ("Shohan Named Head of Wider Scope Fund. " Jewish Telegraphic Agency 23 Aug 1933.) Subjects: Jews -- New York (State) -- New York Metropolitan Area -- Economic conditions -- Statistics. Jews -- New York (State) -- New York Metropolitan Area -- Social conditions -- Statistics. Jews -- Employment -- New York (State) -- New York. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide. (Harvard) In period Spring Binder. Some edge wear. Light age toning and minimal library markings. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-58)
Brass clasps. 34 pages. 28 cm. Holocaust-era imprint. An examination, undertaken at the request of the Jewish Welfare Board, into the vocational struggles of the Jewish community in Rochester, NY. , primarily for incoming Jewish refugees. Contents includes: Basic Problems Faced in Economic Adjustment Process; What Are Vocational Services? ; Attitudes of Youth; What Is Now Being Done; Recommendations. OCLC lists no copies. Cover is worn with some bumping at edges. Some internal pages are slightly darkened, but all text is clear. Very good condition. Rare (HOLO2-41-21) . Xx
Original Illustrated Wraps. 12mo. 12, [2] pages. 18 cm. First edition. Wartime pamphlet on Jews serving in the South African armed forces. Sections include: 'Jewish Enlistments Facts and Figures', 'Decorations for Deeds of Heroism', 'Work on the Home Front'. With 15 black and white photographs. The pamphlet was designed to counter Anti-Semitic allegations and rumors, to denounce race discrimination and race hatred, and argues that every part of South African society, every race and creed, has contributed to the war effort, and that "all must pull together for that final victory which will help to build a just, secure, co-operative South Africa. " Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - Jews. World War, 1939-1945 - South Africa. Jews. World War (1939-1945) . OCLC lists 6 copies. Light wear to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-121-46)
1st edition. Original wraps bound inside pamphlet protector. 8vo. 50, [1] pages. 22 cm. Very early publication from just after Hitler was given emergency powers, exposing the immediate systematic persecution of German Jews by the Nazi regime. (On 30 January 1933 Hitler became Chancellor; in the March 1933 elections, no single party secured a majority. Hitler called on Reichstag members to vote for the Enabling Act on March 24, 1933, and he was granted plenary powers "temporarily" by the passage of the Act. [54] The law gave him the freedom to act without parliamentary consent and even without constitutional limitations) . Published in April 1933 by two British Jewish organizations reporting on official acts of anti-Jewish persecution in Germany by the newly empowered Nazi government. Contents: Nazi Propaganda before 1933, Nazi Pronouncements in 1933, Nazi Outrages, the Persecution of the Jews by the Nazi Government, and British Opinion. With five appendices: The Jewish Population of Germany; General Ludendorff's Manifesto to the Jews of Poland; Extract from the German Government's Letter to the Peace Conference, May 1919; Extract from the German-Polish Convention of May 15th, 1922, regarding upper Silesia; Einstein and Germany. The US Holocaust Museum keeps their copy of this item in their Rare Books Center. Subjects: Jews - Germany. Jews - Persecutions. Jews. Jews Persecutions. Bookplate on title page, Very Good Condition (HOLO2-126-14B)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers, Large 8vo, 43 pages. Published in May 1933. The persecution continues unabated, and has now been placed on a statutory basis by the enactment of a series of decrees by which Jews, as such, are subjected to grave disabilities. These decrees and their practical effects form the main subject of this publication. (from the Foreword) . SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Germany -- Congresses. Persecutions. OCLC: 40835832. The US Holocaust Museum keeps their copy of this item in their Rare Books Center. Edgewear to bottom of edge of wrapper, no text affected, small datestamp and note on cover, otherwise Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-14-ACC-'e)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers, 8vo, 45 pages. Published in June 1933. Contents include: I. Further Development of the Persecution; II. The Nazi Terror; III. The British Opinion; Appendix: Material Relating to Nazi Propaganda. Laid in is a facimile of two relevant letters to the editor of the Manchester Guardian from May 1933 signed "M." (Montefiore?). The US Holocaust Museum keeps their copy of this item in their Rare Books Center. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Germany -- Congresses. Persecutions. OCLC: 230455019. Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-14A-ACC-'e)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 2 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. Recently there was a published novel, The Spectacle of a Man, written by a New York physician under the pseydonym [sic] of John Coignard. Mr. Coignard has definite views on how to cure the Jews so as to kill anti-Semitism. In this interview he presents his views, which in many respects have a rather humorous though not always intentionally so aspect. Read it think it over and smile, if you feel like it. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets and some wear to edges, but all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-29)
1st edition. Original Publisher's Cloth. 8vo. xiii, 676 pages. 24 cm. SUBJECT(S): Jewish refugees. Jews -- Europe. Joden. Vluchtelingen. Includes index. Bibliography on pages 597-658. Light Wear to cloth very Good Condition. (HOLO2-89-49A) xx
Original boards. 4to. Xxviii, 890 pages; 31 cm. In Yiddish with added English title page. Title translates to The Jews in Poland Vol. 1. Written just after the Holocaust. SUBJECT (S) : Polish Jews, Holocaust, WWII. Very minimal edgewear. Very minimal rubbing and staining. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-134-74)
Original boards. 4to. Xxviii, 890 pages; 31 cm. In Yiddish with added English title page. Title translates to The Jews in Poland Vol. 1. Written just after the Holocaust. Contents include: 1. Der Poylisher Yid in der Yidisher geshikhte / A. Menes -- Di Yidn in amolikn Poyln / Refa'el Mahler -- Di Yidn in Poyln fun 1772 biz 1914 / Ya'akov Shatski -- In di yorn fun der ershter velt-milhome / Viktor Shulman. SUBJECT (S) : Polish Jews, Holocaust, WWII. OCLC: 19304047. Spine label, otherwise Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-134-74B-ELX-'+)
Paper-wrappers, 8vo, 87 pages, Submitted to the National Council, 4 copies on OCLC, Ex-library copy, some shelf wear, otherwise very good condition (HOLO2-98-20)
Original paper wrappers stiff protector. 8vo, 14 pages. 25 cm. In Ukrainian. Title translates to "The Brown Bandit. " A critique of German Fascism. Wanda Wasilewska was a well-known Polish communist and propagandist who worked closely with the Soviet Union during and after WWII. She was appointed as head of the Society of Polish Patriots by Joseph Stalin and was very active in the Soviet-sponsored Polish Committee of National Liberation, which supported Polish inclusion in the Soviet Union. SUBJECT (S) : Fascism -- Germany. World War, 1939-1945 -- Ukraine. OCLC lists only 2 copies worldwide (UC Berkeley, NYPL) . Ex-library with usual markings. Pages are brown. Very Good Condition. (UKR-2-1)
1st edition. Original illustrated paper wrappers. 8vo, 46+1 pages. Early Nazi period (1935) discussion of the 7th National Socialist Reichsparteitag [Nazi Party Day] in Nuremberg. "It is not only that the internal policies of the Hitler regime, the suppression of all labor organizations, the murderous terror against the revolutionary and progressive workers, the persecution of Jews, Catholics and Protestants, outrage the sense of fairness and justice of all victims of exploitation, of all liberty-loving people. The latest Nazi atrocity, as this pamphlet goes to press, is the beheading of Rudolph Claus for the 'crime' of acting as treasurer of an organization which attempted to provide some measure of defense to anti-fascists facing trial, and financial assistance to imprisoned victims of fascism and their familiesâ¦. The answer to the war program of the fascist incendiaries lies in the united action of the toiling masses, of all peace-loving people in this country as throughout the world. The answer to 'Hitler against the world' must be 'the world against Hitler'. This is the only way to prevent a new world war" (From the introduction, ) Subjects: National socialism. Politics and government. Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei. Reichsparteitag (7th: 1935: Nuremberg, Germany) . Nurnberger Parteitag (1935) . OCLC: 23586096. "People's World" stamp on front and back wrappers. Pencil note on cover and first page, else clean copy. Very Good Condition Overall. (HOLO2-145-24-AFPT)
1st English Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 67 pages ; 21 cm. Period account of Nazi anti-semitism from the Economic Bureau of the World Jewish Congress. Contents include Germany and the Jews Before 1933, The General Nazi Policy, The Decline of the Jewish Population, The Process of Extermination, and The Impoverishment of German Jewry. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Germany. Persecutions. Some browning and markings on wrappers. About Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-135-24) xx
1st Bergen-Belsen edition. Original boards with gilt lettering. 8vo. 160 pages. 21 cm. In Hebrew. Title translates to Teachings of the School of Elijah. This edition was reprinted from the Warsaw, 1874 edition printed by Yitzhak Goldman. Bergen-Belsen was the largest displaced persons (DP) camp in Germany and was the center of Jewish DP political and social activity in the British zone of occupation. The camp was established in July 1945 near the concentration camp after the British burned the camp barracks during liberation. In 1946, the DP camp housed over 11, 000 Jews. Survivors of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp organized political, cultural, and religious activities just weeks after liberation. The DPs of Bergen-Belsen also created and maintained a lively cultural life and published Unzer Shtimme (Our Voice) , the main Jewish newspaper of the British zone. By the middle of 1950, the camp was nearly empty; the last DPs left in August 1951. The majority of Bergen-Belsen's DPs emigrated to Israel. Many others went to the United States and Canada (USHMM, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Displaced Persons. OCLC lists 5 copies online, three of which are in Israel and two of which are in Germany. Binding is starting. Pages are browning, but in very good condition with very few tears to the first few pages. Some edge wear to boards. Overall in Good Condition. (RAB-64-10)xx
10, [20], 9 pages. Illustrated. In English. Series: Guides and catalogues Yivo Archives ; ; 1. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Persecutions -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. Warsaw (Poland) -- Ethnic relations -- Pictorial works -- Catalogs. OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. In good condition (HOLO2-10-20)
Original Wraps. 12mo. 19 pages. 20 cm. Holocaust-era imprint, the final of 5 annual brochures issued. With frontispiece portrait of Theodor Herzl. Contains the Masada Program, a history of Zionism and Palestine, the Zionist movement, the Masada youth movement, Masada aims and activities, the history of the Masada movement. Contains 14 illustrations. February 1940 - cover. Program of the Masada Zionist Youth Movement, updated and issued yearly between 1936 and 1940. Subjects: Zionism. Masada. Jews, American. Jewish religious education. OCLC lists 3 copies (JTSA, Harvard, Natl Libr Israel) . Light wear to wraps, previous owners signature on front wrap, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (ZION-8-18)
Newsletter, Legal Sized. 3 pages. The Seven Arts Feature Syndicate was a weekly, New York-based, Ango-Jewish weekly periodical in the 1930s. While the world stands aghast at the ferocity of the renewed anti-Jewish terror in Germany, decent men and women everywhere, revolted by sadism and brutality, are asking why this Medievalism, why this needless cruelty? Mr. Zukerman provides the answer in this startling analysis of the financial side of official anti-Semitism. Editor. OCLC lists one copy (National Library of Israel) , although which issue is unclear. Crease through middle of sheets, but all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-37-25)
1946166091Genf, [s.n.], 1946. 48 S., Original-Broschur, 8°. Softcover Umschlag und Seiten minim gebräunt. Schriftenreihe des Schweizerischen Zionistenverbandes, 5/6
Original Cloth. 8vo. XI, 186 pages. 23 cm. First edition. 'The titles of items in languages other than French, German, Italian, and Spanish are also rendered in English translation. ' An extensive, unannotated list of 1, 173 books and articles about Adolf Eichmann, his life, his pursuit and capture, and various aspects of the Trial. Organized by subject with a name index. Subjects: Procès - Israël. Eichmann, Adolf, 1906-1962 Bibliography. World federation of Hungarian Jews. Ex-Library with usual markings. Otherwise Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-131-42A)
1946563Paris, Arthème Fayard, 1946. Édition originale. Grand album de 22 x 28 cm, 112 (2) pp. Relié demi-cuir noir à coins, dos à 5 nerfs ornés de pointillés et traits dorés, nom d'auteur et titre en doré. Plats marbrés. Couverture originale conservée. Tranchefile. Ouvrage illustré d'une cinquantaine de dessins en noir et blanc de l'auteur. Cet ouvrage est un puissant récit autobiographique illustré de l'artiste français Jean Bernard-Aldebert (connu sous le nom de Bernard-Aldebert, 1909-1974), relatant sa captivité dans cinq camps de concentration nazis différents entre 1944 et 1945. Après avoir bâti une carrière d'illustrateur, de caricaturiste et de satiriste, l'artiste voit son destin basculer tragiquement en novembre 1943. Pour avoir caricaturé Hitler sous les traits d'un chimpanzé dans le numéro du 1er août de l'hebdomadaire humoristique français *Ric et Rac*, Bernard-Aldebert est arrêté par la Gestapo. Il est ensuite transféré en janvier 1944 au camp d'internement de Royallieu-Compiègne, puis successivement à Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Gusen I et enfin Gusen II, où il demeure jusqu'à sa libération le 5 mai 1945. Le texte et les illustrations de l'auteur dévoilent les horreurs subies par les prisonniers dans ces camps : travaux forcés brutaux, famine, tortures sadiques et violences diverses. Si Bernard-Aldebert était surtout connu pour des caricatures au style léger et de charme, les images présentées ici versent dans un tout autre registre. Elles rappellent son style habituel, mais se révèlent bien plus dépouillées, sombres et austères, comme un reflet des émotions des personnages qui y apparaissent. Le texte est accompagné, presque systématiquement sur la page en regard, d'une reproduction en noir et blanc d'un dessin original de l'artiste, pour un total de 50 images. Celles-ci sont issues d'une série de croquis dessinés par Bernard-Aldebert peu après sa libération ; ils offrent, encore aujourd'hui, un témoignage visuel et émotionnel inestimable.
1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 806 pages, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish with a Spanish title page. German soldiers first passed through Ratne at the end of June 1941, but Nazi rule was established in the town only in July. Between the retreat of the Soviets and the arrival of German security forces and administrators, locals plundered Jewish homes and businesses. Shortly after the Germans arrived, they shot 27 Jews and 30 Soviet prisoners of war. Acting through the Ukrainian police, they also introduced an array of anti-Jewish measures: Jews had to wear identifying armbands (later yellow patches) , comply with a curfew, hand in valuables, including ritual objects, and provide forced labor. It was forbidden for Jews to speak to Ukrainians. As early as July 1941, Jews from the countryside were already being relocated to Ratne. In the spring of 1942, a ghetto was set up there. After a partisan raid on Ratne in June 1942, the Germans shot more than 110 Jews, along with a few Ukrainians. The Destruction of the Jewish Community. In August, the Germans recruited Ukrainian peasants from Prokhid to dig pits at a nearby sand lot. On August 26, the ghetto was liquidated by a unit from the Gestapo outpost in Brest supported by the local German Gendarmerie post and Ukrainian auxiliary police force. Although several hundred Jews fled before they could be taken to Prokhid. Many others hid in the ghetto. Most were eventually caught and murdered as well. Between 1, 300 and 1, 500 Jewish men, women, and children were killed during this operation. A few dozen skilled laborers were left alive and employed in a workshop. They were shot in February 1943. (protecting-memory.org 2018) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Ukraine -- Ratne. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Ratno (Ukraine) -- Ethnic relations. OCLC: 38702086. Light wear on cover and spine, page edges yellowed, previous owners name and imprint on front end page. Good Condition Overall. Inscription on Spanish title page. (YIZ-19-16A)