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1st edition, later paper wrappers, 8vo. 808 + xx columns, illustrations throughout. In Hebrew, with an English title page and introduction. We consider it important and necessary to represent a review of our Memorial-Book to the children and friends of the Goniondz Society who do not read Yiddish or Hebrew. Let all of them get an idea about the Hometown of their parents and relatives and together with them hold dear the memory of the small Jewish community, that went to martyrdom during the black period of the bestial Nazi rule. 6, 000, 000 Jews perished during the 2nd World War in Eastern and Central Europe. Many bigger and smaller towns were immortalized in memorial books. They stand out like living symbols, spiritual monuments for the coming generations. Our beloved Goniondz has surely earned such a monument. The Jewish Goniondz was very lively and interesting. The small Jewish population was very active, established many parties and clubs and gave to the world outstanding intellectuals in many fields, both Jewish and general. Citizens of Goniondz are spread out all over the world. The majority of them live in the United States and in Israel, where they have established many societies and cooperatives in the socio-philanthropic field, giving financial and moral support to needy townspeople. The Memorial-Book portrays to a great extent the manysided life of Goniondz before its destruction. (from book) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Gonia? Dz. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 18096280, OCLC lists 29 copies worldwide. Cover is missing, outside pages have some wear and discoloration, internally very good, Good Condition overall. (YIZ-20-2)
1st edition. Undated, but definitely published Dec. 1942-April 1943 based on ads and statements inside. Octavo, original stapled paper covers, 98 pages. Important Holocaust-era documentation of the attrocities befalling the Jews of Europe,Opening with a statement from FDR from Dec 1942 and continuing with articles by Hayim Greenberg, Victor Gollancz, Marie Syrkin, and the Archbishop of Toulouse as well as unsigned reports on the various nations of Europe. Includes a map as well as documentation of "The Extermination Center" at Chelmno and the use of extermination vans followed by burial in mass graves with chemical desolving agents. . Light wear, Small mark on cover, about Very Good Condition. Important (Holo2-120-1-+-'e)
1st edition. Original illustrated paper wrappers, 12mo, 64 pages. 4.75x7 inches. Cover shows a miserable prisoner flanked by ball & chains of swastika and hammer & sickle, behind whom hover Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, and front and center The Pope. "Jehovah's Witnesses were subjected to intense persecution under the Nazi regime. The Nazis targeted Jehovah's Witnesses because they were unwilling to accept the authority of the state, because of their international connections, and because they were strongly opposed to both war on behalf of a temporal authority and organized government in matters of conscience. Within months of the Nazi takeover, regional governments, primarily those of Bavaria and Prussia, initiated aggressive steps against Jehovah's Witnesses, breaking up their meetings, ransacking and then occupying their local offices. By April 1, 1935, the Reich and Prussian Minister of the Interior ordered the responsible local officials to dissolve the Watchtower Society. Many actions of Jehovah's Witnesses antagonized Nazi authorities. While Witnesses contended that they were apolitical and that their actions were not anti-Nazi, their unwillingness to give the Nazi salute, to join party organizations or to let their children join the Hitler Youth, their refusal to participate in the so-called elections or plebiscites, and their unwillingness to adorn their homes with Nazi flags made them suspect. A special unit of the Gestapo compiled a registry of all persons believed to be Jehovah's Witnesses. Gestapo agents infiltrated Bible study meetings" (USHMM 2016) No copies listed in OCLC. Evenly- toned newsprint, Very Good Condition. Holocaust-related Jehovah's Witnesses material is rare, this imprint especially so. (HOLO2-134-61) xx
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 53 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Spanish. Title translates as: The Neonazi movement in West Germany. Published by the Institute of Argentine Jews for Culture and Information, this medium length tract documents in detail the abhorrent manifestations of the renewed resurgence of neo-nazis and pro-fascist veteran groups in West Germany. Subjects: Antisemitism - Germany (West) . Fascism - Germany (West) . OCLC lists four copies worldwide (Harvard, HUC, AJU, Natl Libr Israel) . Institutional stamps on cover. Light soiling to wraps and outer edges; water stains throughout. However, text crisp. Fair condition. (HOLO2-99-26)
(FT) Publishers cloth. 8vo. 104 pages. 22 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Author's note and three selections of poems in English; with one poem in Polish. The poems and memoir of Sam Waks, a survivor of Auschwitz. Subjects: Yiddish poetry. Yiddish literature. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ex-libris stamps on endpages. Otherwise near fine. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-99-38)
1st edition. Original illustrated paper wrappers, 8vo, 24 pages. Loaded with Photographic illustrations of refugee childrens artwork, including children who came to England on the Kindertransport from Germany. Consists of 20 reproductions of paintings and drawings by children in the exhibition "The war as seen by children, " a foreword by J. G. Siebert, outlining the history of the exhibition, and a speech by Austrian-emigre artist Oskar Kokoschka at its opening, January 4, 1943, in the Cooling galleries, New Bond street, a fund-raiser for the German refugee school at Theydon Bois. Variant title: Our Children To-day and To-morrow. No. 1. SUBJECT (S) : Child artists. Art -- Exhibitions. World War, 1939-1945 -- Pictorial works. World War, 1939-1945 -- Children. Exhibition catalogs. A similar copy sold at auction in 2015 for over USD 650. Light Wear, Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-16) xx
in-8, broché. Plis de lecture au dos sinon bel exemplaire [MA-5]
1st edition. Original Publishers cloth. 4to. VIII, 2008 pages. 29 cm. In Yiddish. First edition. Edited by Mendel Sudarsky, Uriah Katzenelenbogen, J. Kissen. This Yizkor volume consists of hundreds of testimonies and local histories compiled by Lithuanian survivors and landsmanshaftn detailing their communities history and the destruction thereof, is an extremely important contribution to regional Jewish historiography and to knowledge about the Holocaust era in Europe. From the preface to the second volume:"the momentous compilation Lite (published in 1951 in New York) which was received by the general Jewish public with such appreciation" (from the forword to Vol II, issued a decade later). Subjects: Jews - Lithuania - History. Lithuania - Ethnic relations. Memorial volumes. Lithuania - History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Lithuania. Cities and towns - Lithuania. OCLC lists copies 8 copies worldwide. Inscription on title page, a few margin notes in index, light wear, Good + condition. (yiz-7-9)
1st English language edition. Original cloth, with dust jacket. 4to, xx + 427 pages. Illustrations throughout. In English. The story of the former Polish-Jewish community (shtetl) of Luboml, Wolyn, Poland. Its Jewish population of some 4, 000, dating back to the 14th century, was exterminated by the occupying German forces and local collaborators in October, 1942. Luboml was formerly known as Lyuboml, Volhynia, Russia and later Lyuboml, Volyns'ka, Ukraine. It was also know by its Yiddish name: Libivne. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Ukraine -- Liuboml. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. Russia, Volyn, Vladimir-Volynsk, Jewish history. Poland, Wolyn. OCLC: 36364181. Some wear on dust jacket, Very Good Condition overall. (YIZ-17-12A)
1st edition thus. Original Wrappers. 8vo. 15 pages. 23 cm. Nazi-era abridged and condensed version of an article originally published in Fortune magazine, and later published by Random House. This booklet presented by the Editors of Digest and Review. The Jewish Problem has become violently acute in recent years. What is anti-Semitism? How does it start? Does it exist in the United States? Is it true that Jews control industry, business, public opinion? [ ] The Editors of Fortune undertook to make such an impartial survey. Their conclusions, it is safe to say, were totally unexpected both by Jews and non-Jews. The results of this research, appearing originally in Fortune, were later published in book form by Random House. (Publishers Description) In reference to the original appearance of this article in Fortune Isaac Goldberg writes, in his monograph The So-Called Protocols of the Elders of Zion , It proves, once again beyond the slightest doubt, that the Jew despite this prominent person or the other, is not anything like the power in national affairs invented by the Protocol-terrorizers. (Goldberg, pg 24) Subjects: Jews United States. Jewish Question. Antisemitism. OCLC lists 13 copies worldwide. Very minimal age toning to wrappers. Bright crisp and clean. Very goodcondition. (HOLO2-116-23)
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 2 volumes: [55] + 32 pages ; 21 cm. In Dutch. Title translates into English as, Psycho-Social Problems of the Second Generation. Thesis of Clinical Psychology from the University of Nijmegen. Informatie en Coordinatie Orgaan Dienstverlening Oorlogsgetroffenen (ICODO) is the Coordinating Body for War Victim Services. SUBJECTS: Transgenerational Trauma. OCLC lists 15 copies worldwide. Only 2 outside of the Netherlands (Berkeley and University of Haifa) . Very good+ condition. (holo2-130-70)
Original Paper Wrappers. 21 pages. Illus. 20 cm. In German. Title translates to English as, Buchenwald: A Guide Through the Memorial. Includes maps, significant dates. SUBJECT (S) : Buchenwald (Concentration camp) . Wrappers worn but solid. Internal pages are tanned, but not fragile. Good Condition. (HOLO2-93-17)
Prayer Pamphlet from from Kol Nidre service of American synagogue. 16mo. One sheet. 18 cm. In English with some Hebrew. There is a reference to the Holocaust in the header, which states: To the Congregation. Mindful of the distressed condition of the Jews of Germany, let us commune together as the choir sings the words of the following anthem followed by Psalm 86. Light crease, otherwise in very good condition. (AMR-38-13)
Original printed wrappers. 4to. 11 pages. 30cm. In German. Compact tabloid format internally, with broadsheet printed covers. Title translates as The Curse and Inescapable Destiny of the Jews. Written by Kurt Reiss, under the pseudonym Abraham Cohen. This Antisemitic, millenarian polemic situates itself alongside the numerous Antisemitic conspiracy theories clinging to the fringes of early Nazi propaganda, a kind of millenialist Nazi-Zionism that calls for the Jews to be returned to Palestine to bring about the second coming of Jesus. In this piece, Reiss celebrates Hitler as the latest confirmation that the Jews are the chosen people, and sees Hitler as a guide and shepherd that will prevent the assimilation of the Jewish people and help bring them to Palestine to facilitate the final salvation. Kurt [Reiss] left school at the age of 15 and developed an interest in religion. He believed that the Jews should recognize Jesus Christ as their Messiah. He also attempted to secure patents for mechanical inventions. Kurt convinced the family to emigrate to Canada. According to a family member Kurt suffered from mental illness. He was unable to work and spent his days writing notes about his daily activities and his religious ideas. His sister Lola always took care of him. (Leo Baeck Institute) OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide. (Yeshiva Univ. , National Libr. Of the Czech Republic, Natl. Libr. Of Germany) Some age toning and light shelf wear. Text clean and bright. Very good condition. Unusual and an important example (HOLO2-112-2) xxxxxxxx
Original printed wrappers. 4to. 11 pages. 30cm. In German. Compact tabloid format internally, with broadsheet printed covers. Title translates as The Curse and Inescapable Destiny of the Jews. Written by Kurt Reiss, under the pseudonym Abraham Cohen. This Antisemitic, millenarian polemic situates itself alongside the numerous Antisemitic conspiracy theories clinging to the fringes of early Nazi propaganda, a kind of millenialist Nazi-Zionism that calls for the Jews to be returned to Palestine to bring about the second coming of Jesus. In this piece, Reiss celebrates Hitler as the latest confirmation that the Jews are the chosen people, and sees Hitler as a guide and shepherd that will prevent the assimilation of the Jewish people and help bring them to Palestine to facilitate the final salvation. Kurt [Reiss] left school at the age of 15 and developed an interest in religion. He believed that the Jews should recognize Jesus Christ as their Messiah. He also attempted to secure patents for mechanical inventions. Kurt convinced the family to emigrate to Canada. According to a family member Kurt suffered from mental illness. He was unable to work and spent his days writing notes about his daily activities and his religious ideas. His sister Lola always took care of him. (Leo Baeck Institute) OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide. (Yeshiva Univ. , National Libr. Of the Czech Republic, Natl. Libr. Of Germany) . Some age toning and light shelf wear. Center crease from horizontal fold. Text clean and bright. Very good condition. (HOLO2-112-2a)
Original Wraps. 8vo. 14 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In French. 'Bolshevism is not Jewish'. Nazi-era French pamphlet countering anti-Semitic propaganda about Jews and Bolshevism. Pamphlet gives a short history of Bolshevism and its non-Jewish precursors (German philosophy and social democracy, French utopian socialists, Russian populists and anarchists) , the general opposition of Jews to Bolshevism on moral and political grounds, Ludendorf's Lenin convoy, the immense reciprocal engagement of Russian Bolshevism and German social democracy and the failed German revolutions, Jews in the anti-communist party, Jewish religious opposition to communism, the red army's pogroms, the small number of Jews in the communist party, etc. Subjects: Communism and Judaism. Socialism and Judaism. Jews - Soviet Union. OCLC lists 9 copies. Wraps soiled, small tear to corner of title page, pages lightly aged, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-123-36)
Tel Aviv : Irgun yotse Pinsk-Karlin bi-Medinat Yisrael,Year: 1966-1982. Cloth 4to, 655. Includes illustrations, facsimiles, foldout maps, portraits, etc. 28 cm. Includes Index. In Hebrew & Yiddish. LCCN: he 68-2477 SUBJECT(S): Jews -- Belarus -- Pinsk -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Belarus -- Pinsk. Jews -- Belarus -- Karlin -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Belarus -- Karlin. Geographic: Pinsk (Belarus) -- Ethnic relations. Karlin (Belarus) -- Ethnic relations. Very Good Condition in Very Good Jacket. (YIZ-6-6)
1st edition. Publishers cloth. 8vo. 252; 318; 288; 304; 308; 244; 275 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Poland; Memoirs and Pictures. The grand epic memoir of Yekhiel Yeshaye Trunk (18871961) ; which he began as soon as arriving in New York in 1941, it took a decade to complete. Trunks broad political, social, and cultural experiences informed his autobiographical epic Poyln, a study of the decline of the upper strata of Polish Jewish society and the rise of a new secular Jewishness embodied in folklore, Yiddish literature, and the Bund. This work, his crowning achievement, focused almost entirely on the multifaceted collectivity of Polish Jewry, while relegating his personal story and inner struggle to the sideline. (YIVO Encyclopedia) . Trunk was the chief archivist of YIVO at the time of his death, and was considered, in an obituary published in the New York Times, one of the leading historians in the United States on the destruction of European Jewry during the Nazi era. Seven volume set, bound in green cloth with gilt title. Subjects: Authors, Yiddish - Poland - Biography. Jews - Poland - History. First volume cloth heavily worn with previous owners bookstamp, otherwise very clean. All other volumes have minor shelf wear to cloth, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good + condition. (YIZ-15-9)
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)
2nd edition, first edition published in 1977. Original cloth, 8vo. 207 pages, illustrations throughout. In English. A revised, expanded edition of The Ritavas community. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Lithuania -- Rietavas. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 50155428. Very Good Condition. (YIZ-18-20) xx
1st edition, original cloth with dust jacket, 4to. 449 + xiii pages, illustrations throughout. In Hebrew, with English introduction, and some Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Poland -- Siemiatycze -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19187600. Light marks on cover, dust jacket is worn and yellowed, book title written in pen on dust jacket flap, hinges starting, Good Condition Overall. (YIZ-19-20)
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)
YIZKER BUKH NOKH DREY-UN-TSV?ONTSIK HORUV GEVORENE YIDISHE KEHILES` IN SVENTSYANER GEGNT?; SEFER ZIKARON LE-EZOR SHVINTSYAN. SEFER ZIKARON LE-?ES´RIM VE-SHALOSH KEHILOT SHE-NEHREVU BE-EZOR SHVINTSYAN Tel-Aviv : Irgun Yots'e Ezor Shvintsyan be-Yis´ra'el19651st Edition. Original Publishers Cloth, 4to (Large), 1954 columns. Includes endpaper maps and illustrations throughout. Chiefly in Yiddish. Title translates as, A Book of Remembrance for Twenty-Three Communities Destroyed in the Shvintsyan Area. Each chapter concerns a different community: Svencian - New Svencian - Old and New Dugelishak - Ignalina - Lingmian - Kaltinian - Duksht - Podbrads - Lintop - Kimelishak - Heidutschak - Styatshik - - Gaviken - Weeds - Kazian - Kabilnik - Niemenchin - Fastov - Yadi - Myari. SUBJECT(S): Jews -- Lithuania -- S?venc?ionys -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) OCLC: 23554363. Light wear, Very Good Condition (YIZ-18-9)
1st edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 40 pages. 22 cm. Cover displays a reprint of an Arthur Szyk drawing. Published just as the Holocaust was ending, this is a collection of largely religious -themed poetry address the murder of the Jews by the Nazis. Eldridge was "an American poet, novelist, short story writer and teacher....He...married a fellow writer, Sylvette de Lamar (author of a 1932 novel Jews and the Cross)....He is best known for collaborating with the American decadent novelist and poet George Sylvester Viereck on a trilogy of exotic fantasy novels from 1928 to 1932, My First Two Thousand Years: the Autobiography of the Wandering Jew, Salome: the Wandering Jewess and the Invincible Adam" (Wikipedia, 2010). Contents of this volume includes: Let Us Pray; And There Was Justice; We-The Chosen Uninvited; The Law Inexorable; Walk Proudley, Jew! ; To the King of the Yellow Badge; Of Men and Ostriches; Ballad of Toolittle and Toolate; Epitaph for Eliahu Hakim and Eliahu Souri. OCLC: 2730716. Cover is lightly worn along the spine and some writing in corner, but still nice. Internal pages are tanned but clean. Very good condition. (SPEC20-11C) .
[1945] 1st Edition. Original Illustrated Paper Wrappers with red illustration of a sinking ship from the infamous May 3rd 1945 bombing of the Thielbek, Cap Arcona, and Deutschland. 8vo. 35 pages ; 21 cm. In Dutch. Title translates to, Neuengamme: The Disaster in the Bend of Lubeck. The Neuengamme concentration camp, was a German concentration camp, established in 1938 by the SS near the village of Neuengamme in the Bergedorf district of Hamburg, Germany. It was operated by the Nazis from 1938 to 1945. Over that period an estimated 106, 000 prisoners were held at Neuegamme and at its subcamps (Wikipedia, 2016) British forces arrived on May 4, 1945. In early May 1945, the SS loaded some 9, 000-10, 000 prisonersmost of them evacuated from Neuengamme and its subcampsonto three ships anchored in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Neustadt in Schleswig-Holstein. Some 7, 000 lost their lives when the British attacked two of the ships in the course of a raid on the harbor on May 3. The Thielbek, carrying about 2, 000 prisoners, sank quickly. The Cap Arcona, carrying more than 4, 500 prisoners, burned and capsized during the attack. Only about 600 prisoners from both ships survived. (US Holocaust Museum) . This is a Dutch account of the tragedy by survivor H. Rolsma. Rolsmas byline on the cover also reads, Prisoner No. 77431 OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide, none outside of the Netherlands. Some edgewear. Good+ condition. Important story. (holo2-130-62)