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1391o.J. 4° (26 x 17cm). 12 Blatt ohne Paginierung. Text in niederländischer und deutscher Sprache. Mit einer Einführung von Rüdiger Gero Bojunga. Handgebundener Halbpergamentband mit Buntpapier-Überzug. Tadellos erhalten.
8vo; First edition. Original boards. 8vo. 231 pages. 25 cm. In Hebrew and Yiddish. Title translates as: Our City Visotsk: Memorial Book. Memorial volume for the Jewish community of Vysotsk (Wysock) near Rovno in Ukraine. The community was founded in the 16th century. Nearly 1,000 Jews lived there before World War II. Most of them were executed by Einsatzgruppen in 1942. SUBJECTS: Memorial Books - Yizkor Books. Formerly part of the Ein Herod Kibbutz library with some stamps. Overall Very Good Condition. (YIZ-3-19A)
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 94 pages. 22 cm. Series: Jewish Life in America, Number Three. CONTENTS: Characteristics of the Jewish Settlement --- The Pre-Historic Period --- The New Immigration [refugees & survivors] --- Economic Development --- Culture and Press --- Jews and Cubans --- Organizing the Community. Translated from Spanish by Simon Wolin. Covers lightly worn with small chip to one corner; internal pages are nice and clean. Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-101-19)
198714674CBBoulder/London, Westview Press (= A Westview special study), 1987. 8°, XI, 198 S. (Text: Englisch), original Kartonage (Paperback), Erstausgabe untere Ecke des Rückdeckels mit Knickspur, die Hälfte der Seiten papierbedingt minimal wellspurig, sonst schönes, sauberes Exemplar (hilireg3ho)
1st edition, original cloth, 4to. 826 columns, illustrations throughout. In Yiddish, foreword also in English. This book describes the city of Suwalk, Poland and the surrounding communities. Many black and white photographs are included, along with reproductions of important documents. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Suwalki -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 11558550, OCLC lists 29 copies worldwide. Some wear on corners, some marks on page edges, spine replaced, very good internally, Good Condition overall. (YIZ-19-12)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 12 pages. 23 cm. First edition. Nazi-era publication on the revival of Hebrew and a survey of Hebrew literature and the press. Discusses specialized areas of study in history, biography, literary criticism, reprinting medieval classics, translations; the specialties of Hebrew writers (terror and gloom, romanticism) . Contains three tables displaying the number of Hebrew books sold in Palestine and exported elsewhere. Subjects: Literature. Hebrew literature - Israel. OCLC lists 4 copies (NYPL, Natl Libr Israel, Harvard, HUC) . Light soiling to wraps. Previous owners name and stamp on front wrap, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (ZION-8-22) xx
(FT) Original Wrappers. 12mo. 79 pages. 17 cm. Undated edition. In Yiddish. Song of the Murdered Jewish People" by Itzhak Katzenelson (18851944) , a Hebrew and Yiddish poet. Katzenelsons world fell apart when in August 1942 his wife Hanna and two younger sons, Ben-Tsiyon and Binyamin, were deported to Treblinka. From then on, his literary creativity was piercingly shaped by lamentations over the loss of his family. Nonetheless, with his oldest son, Tsevi, he found the strength to join the Jewish Fighting Organization and took part in the first uprising of January 1943. After the ghetto was destroyed in April and May 1943, he escaped to the Aryan section of Warsaw and obtained a Honduran identity document. Nevertheless, he was sent to a German detention camp for foreign subjects in Vittel, France. He was imprisoned there until April 1944, and devoted most of his time to writing. Two important works were produced during that period: Pinkas Vitel (The Vittel Diary) , a Hebrew composition that uses the language of an incensed diarist and reconstructs the days of terror in Warsaw during the mass deportations; and Dos lid fun oysgehargetn yidishn folk (The Poem about the Murdered Jewish People) , a pathos-filled Yiddish poem that laments the destruction of the Jewish people and of the poet himself, who has been become bitterly angry with humankind and God. These two works are among the boldest and most lofty literary expressions to emerge from the Holocaust. All of Katzenelsons works from his Vittel period were either buried in hiding places or were given to people he trusted; consequently, they were saved and published shortly after the end of the war. In the middle of April 1944, Katzenelson and his son Tsevi were sent to the Drancy transit camp, and from there one month later to Auschwitz, where they were murdered. In 1950, the Ghetto Fighters kibbutz built a museum and an institute for research about the Holocaust that bear Yits? Ak Katzenelsons name. (YIVO Encyclopedia) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poetry. Half Dollar size chip to cover, no text loss, institutional stamp on title page, taped spine, otherwise Good Condition. (HOLO2-97-33xx)
Original Cloth. 8vo. IX, 158; VIII, 255 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Two volume set of the selected writings of Randolph Braham. Contains the following essays: Volume 1. The Holocaust in Hungary: a retrospective analysis; What did they know and when? ; The Hungarian press, 1938-1945; The Holocaust in Hungary: an historical interpretation of the role of the Hungarian radical right; The official Jewish leadership of wartime Hungary; The rescue of the Jews of Hungary in historical perspective; The national trials relating to the Holocaust in Hungary: an overview. Volume 2. The Christian churches of Hungary and the Holocaust; Remembering and forgetting: the Vatican, the German Catholic hierarchy, and the Holocaust; The influence of the war on the Jewish policies of the German satellite states; Revisionism: historical, political, and legal implications; Anti-semitism and the Holocaust in the politics of East Central Europe; Romanian nationalists and the Holocaust: a case study in history cleansing; The assault on historical memory: Hungarian nationalists and the Holocaust; Canada and perpetrators of the Holocaust: the case of Regina v. Finta. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Hungary. Holocaust. Judenvernichtung. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) 1939 - 1945 Ungarn. Hungary. Light shelf wear to jacket of both volumes, otherwise very clean and fresh. Very good + condition in very good jacket. (BRAHAM-1-1) xxxx
Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 160 pages. In Yiddish with Spanish title page. On the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Covers worn and detached but present. Internal pages in good condition. (HOLO2-10-12).
No Date [1934]. [2] typewritten pages, 30cm x 21 cm. 2-page membership list from the first full-year of Hitlers full power in Germany, showing approximately 75 current members with city and address. Agudath Israel was founded in Kattowitz, German Empire (now Katowice, Poland), in 1912, with the purpose of providing an umbrella organization for observant Jews who opposed the Zionist movement. In Erez Israel, Agudat Yisrael was established as a branch of this movement, to provide opposition to the organized Jewish community (the "Yishuv"). One of its most authoritative spokesmen against the formation of a Jewish State, the Dutch poet Jacob Israël de Haan, was assassinated by the Haganah in 1924. In the wake of the Holocaust, anti-Zionist rabbis who led Agudat Israel recognized the great utility of a Jewish state, and it became non-Zionist, rather than anti-Zionist. It did not actively participate in the creation of Israel, but it ceased its opposition to it. In 1933, it entered into an agreement with the Jewish Agency, according to which Agudat Yisrael would receive 6.5% of the immigration permits. Eventually, at the eve of the Israeli Declaration of Independence (1948), Agudat Yisrael yielded to pressure from the Zionist movement, and has been a participant in most governments since that time. age staining, few tears, very brittle. (Holo2-146-8)
24mo. , 142 pages. In English & Hebrew. Heavy wear to spine, hinge starting inside, otherwise good condition. (AMR31-8)
Original paper wrappers. 4to, 32 cm. Pages 465-484, [20] pages total. Photographs and illustrations throughout. Holocaust-era "Travel Issue" of this national Reform weekly. April 20, 1934. "Continuing in this Issue [: ] Nazi Propaganda in the U. S. " Headlines include: "What would Nazis Do Without Jews? Kaleidoscopic Impressions of an Unbiased Observer in Hitlerland, " "Germany Today Highlights of the Week's News from Germany and Reports of Nazi Activities Abroad, " "The Jewish Scene the World Over, " which includes article "Hitlerite Propagandists Active in Cuba, Mexico and Latin-American Countries, " and "Press and Leaders Denounce Religion in Politics. " This was a weekly publication that began February 5, 1932 and went until October 24, 1935. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish newspapers -- United States. New York County (N. Y. ) -- Newspapers. United States. OCLC: 8325804. Photograph of the Special House Committee on cover. Some color details on cover. Cover has slight vertical creases, Very Good+ Condition beautiful copies. (HOLO2-159-19/20-BL-'a+)
12mo. 16 pages. Illustrated guide book from the museum tour. SUBJECT (S) : Antisemitism Germany museum; National socialism; Anne Frank Museum; Frank family; Frank, Anne, 1929-1945 museum. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Very good condition. (HOLO2-8-4)
Original paper wrappers, 8vo., 75 pages. Edition: 10th anniversary publication. SUBJECT(S): Jews -- Great Britain. Jewish refugees. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Contents include: "Our Legacy" by Leo Baeck, "Some Facts about the Jewish Refugees" by Werner Rosenstock, "German Jews and Anglo-Jewry" by Rabbi Dr. Ignaz Maybaum, "The Newcomers in Trade and Industry" by Dr. Leon Zeitlin, and a series of articles on Contributions to Science and Arts. Includes period advertisements. Light wear and tanning to cover, light staining to margins of first 25 pages. Good condition. (MX-34-37)
Original paper wrappers, 8vo., 75 pages. Edition: 10th anniversary publication. SUBJECT(S): Jews -- Great Britain. Jewish refugees. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Contents include: "Our Legacy" by Leo Baeck, "Some Facts about the Jewish Refugees" by Werner Rosenstock, "German Jews and Anglo-Jewry" by Rabbi Dr. Ignaz Maybaum, "The Newcomers in Trade and Industry" by Dr. Leon Zeitlin, and a series of articles on Contributions to Science and Arts. Includes period advertisements. Small patch of the cover rubbed away, obstructing part of title text. Otherwise, very good condition. (MX-34-38)
Cloth, 8vo. , 122 pages. Sections on "The Shadow of the Swastika" (pp. 74-75) and "England and Zionism" (pp.81-86) . JTS keeps their copy in the rare book room. SUBJECT(S) : Jews in art. Jews in art -- History. Art, Jewish. Art, Jewish -- Exhibitions. Joden. Kunstvoorwerpen. Other Titles: Anglo-Jewish art and history. Light wear and sunning to spine. Otherwise very good condition. (HOLO2-20-20)
Pamphlet. 8vo. [3] pages. 22 cm. Holocaust-era publication detain this period attempt at explicitly bringing Christian and Jewish young people together. [This] article by a correspondent describes an experiment in a mixed Jewish-Christian youth camp SUBJECT (S) : Jewish camps -- England. Jewish youth -- England. Named Corp: Association for Jewish Youth (Great Britain) . Young Men's Christian Association (London, England) . "Reprinted by courtesy of the The Jewish Chronicle August 24th 1945." OCLC lists one copy (Harvard College Library) . Lightly worn with some bumping at edges, but all text is clear. Very good condition. Interesting period piece. (HOLO2-61-24) . Xx
(FT) (FT) Cloth, 8vo, 215 pages, in Yiddish, with pictures, Title on title page verso: Drai: three, Biography of Pola Elster, Hersh Berlinski and Eliyahu Erlikh, who were all three ambitous, political and active in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. All three of them were killed in 1944. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Biography. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland. Covers worn, some staining to edges, hinge repair, otherwise very clean copy in very good condition (HOLO2-98-21xx)
8vo. 12 pages. In English. Organization formed during the Holocaust, active in the American Jewish response to the Shoah. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Societies, etc. Institute of Jewish Affairs. Institute of Jewish Affairs -- Catalogs. In very good condition. (AMR31-25)
Wrappers, small 8vo, 16 pages, with translucent overwrap. Reprinted on the occasion of the 50th anniversary convocation, April 25, 1984. Announcement of program offerings, with biographical information. From the universitys website: Between 1933 and 1945, Alvin Johnson and the New School sponsored 183 refugee scholars . Of the original twelve refugees all were fervent antifascists and almost all were Jewish. This program lists all of them. OCLC lists only 2 copies available in libraries worldwide (Yale University Law School, Staats & Universitatsbibliothek Hamburg) . Clipping of N. Y. Times article on convocation inserted. Vellum-like overwrap folded, otherwise in excellent condition. (Holo2-42-10)
(FT) paper wrappers, 8vo. , 261 pages. , [8] pages. Of plates. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) Descriptor: World War, 1939-1945 -- Personal narratives, Jewish. Named Person: Yelin, Haim, 1912-1944. Translation from the Yiddish original: H? Ayim Yelin, der get? O-k? Emfer un shrayber. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Light wear and staining to covers, text in very good condition. (HOLO2-84-8)
8vo. 205 pages. In Yiddish. Illustrated. Memorial book to the two murdered Bundist leaders, published 2 years after their deaths. Alter (18901941) , was a leader of the Bund in Poland. Alter was born in Mlawa, Poland, into a wealthy hasidic family. He graduated as an engineer in 1910, in Liège, Belgium. In 1912 he became active in the Bund in Warsaw. Exiled to Siberia for his political activities, he later escaped. During World War I, Alter found employment in England, as a laborer and then as an engineer. He returned to Poland after the February Revolution in 1917 and became a member of the central committee of the Bund. Between 1919 and 1939 Alter was one of the prominent leaders of the Bund and Jewish trade unions in Poland. He was a Warsaw city councilor for almost 20 years, and after 1936 a member of the board of the Jewish community. After the Germans invaded Poland in September 1939, Alter escaped to the Russian-occupied zone. However, he was soon arrested with his associate, Henryk Erlich. They were both executed on December 4, 1941, in Kuibyshev (Ezekiel Lifschutz in EJ, 2007) . SUBJECT(S) : Jewish socialists Poland biography; Political prisoners Soviet Union biography; Erlich, Henryk, 1882-1941; Alter, Victor, 1890-1941. OCLC lists 11 copies worldwide. Patterned endpapers, spots of wear on cloth of front cover, some pages creased in upper corners, good condition. (HOLO2-7-27)
Softcover, 215 pages, 8vo, 21 cm. Contents: European history as the seedbed of the Holocaust . Jacob L. Talmon -- The influence of the Holocaust on the change in the attitude of world Jewry to Zionism and the State of Israel. Nahum Goldmann -- The Holocaust and the struggle of the Yishuv as factors in the establishment of the State of Israel. Yehuda Bauer -- The Holocaust as background for the decision of the United Nations to establish a Jewish state. David Horowitz -- The Holocaust as a factor in the national awakening of Soviet Jewry. Shmuel Ettinger. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Congresses. Zionism -- History -- Congresses. Israel and the diaspora -- Congresses. Holocaust. Joden. Translation of ha-Shoah veha-tekumah. Browning of pages. Good condition. (Holo2-18-18)
English Edition. Weekly periodical. Volume 18, nos. 21 (April 23rd) , 22(April 30th) , and 47(October 1st) . Number 47 title change to "World News and Views". No. 21 includes: "May Day, 1938-A Day of Struggle Against Fascism and War", "A Journey Through Poland' by F. Struck, and "The Nazi Net in the International Sports Movement". No. 22 includes an article on "The Laws Against the Jews" in Hungary, and "The Depressed Mood Among the Nazis after the Plebiscite". No. 47 includes: "The Fifth Anniversary of the Leipzig Trial". SUBJECT(S) : World politics -- 20th century -- Periodicals. Very good condition. (HOLO2-20-35)
Folded leaf (8-1/2 x 17) , illustrated. Newsletter with articles on services to Hungarian and Egyptian refugees in Austria and France, and Israeli immigrants. OCLC lists two libraries worldwide holding this title (Harvard Univ. , Stanford Univ. ) . Minor tears and folds. (Holo5-42-12)