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12mo. 7 pages. Cover art. Introductory note by the president outlines the responsibilities the Board was faced with after the United States entered World War II. Mentions that the Board was the only Jewish agency authorized by the United States Army, Navy and Veterans' Administration to work in their fields. SUBJECT (S): Jewish Community Centers-Periodicals; Jews-Charities. OCLC appears to list 2 holdings with complete runs (NYPL, Wisc Historical) Edgeworn, occasional marks on covers, good condition. (HOLO2-6-35) xx
1st edition. 4to. Later Cloth, 4to, Approximately 20 pages each, approximately 520 pages total. Issues were published weekly. Holocaust-era American weekly Jewish magazine. From the time of its founding, The American Hebrew covered many topics of intense Jewish interest internationally (wikipedia 2018). This set of magazines contain articles about WWII, such as the topic of Jewish refugees, Behind the War, Relationship Between Religion and Democracy, War Propaganda in England and Germany, as well as things essays as a Resort Guide: Another List of Ideal Vacation Spots Selected for American Hebrew Readers. SUBJECT(S): Jewish newspapers. -- United States. OCLC: 1479954. Many copies have a YMHA stamp on cover of magazine. Cloth cover has staining and dampstains, pages are not affected. Spine says American Hebrew 147 May-Nov. 1940. Magazines in Very Good Condition. (HOLO2-140-11-J)
1st edition, original wrappers, 8vo. 31+[1] pages. The International Scientific Session under the heading The Child In the Years of The Second World War was held in Warsaw on 26th-28th of April 1979. It was organized on the occasion of the International Year of the Child by the Main Commission for the Investigation of Nazi Crimes in Poland and by the Council for the Protection of Monuments of Combat and Martyrdom. The subject of the session were Nazi crimes committed on children and youth, the struggle of nations to save children and youth from their biological extermination, demoralization, denationalization and depravation by the Nazi occupant and also the participation of youth in the combat against Nazism in the years of the Second World War, 1939-1945 . The session coincided with the 40th anniversary of the Third Reichs aggression on Poland which initiated the Second World War, and with the 34th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany. It was, therefore, an occasion to reflect on what was fascizm and where it led to. (from introduction) SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Children -- Poland. Atrocities. Corp Author(s) : Rada Ochrony Pomników Walki I Meczenstwa (Poland) ; Glówna Komisja Badania Zbrodni Niemieckich w Polsce. OCLC: 34502040, OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide: (National Library of Poland, Bib Narodowa, US Holocaust Memorial Museum, University of S Florida Library, and Niod Instituut Voor Oorlogs) . Upper right corner of cover and pages is slightly bent, light wear on cover, else Very Good Condition. Scarce. (HOLO2-140-4-U)
8vo. Included No. 22, June 1943; No. 35, July 1944; No. 36, August 1944; No. 45, May 1945. SUBJECT (S) : Jews; World War, 1939-1945. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. The purpose of this Bulletin is to provide readers with information and views of Jewish interest on present-day issues, especially from the spiritual point of view. No. 22 and 45 have a few small tears around the edges, all are yellowed to varying degrees, overall good condition. Price for lot of all 4 issues. (k-HOLO2-6-26)
Paper, 8 pages. Published monthly. The cover story is The State of Israel, reporting on the proclamation of the new state, expressing both awe and dismay. The Bund was historically anti-Zionist, instead emphesizing its philosophy of "Do-Kayt"--"Here-ness," under which Jewish life is built right here, wherever Jews are now living, not in Palestine. SUBJECT (S) : Socialism -- United States Periodicals; Jews -- United States Periodicals; Working class -- United States -- Periodicals. OCLC lists seven libraries worldwide holding this periodical. Excellent condition. (Holo2-30-19)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 12mo, 13+[1] pages. Holocaust-era publication discussing the response of guerilla warfare to Nazi invasion and atrocities. "Since the Germans have been in occupation of the different countries no class of the population has escaped the plunder, violence, brutality, misfortune and death which fascism has brought in its train. It is this common suffering of all classes that mainly explains the nation-wide character of the anti-Hitler front in every occupied country. " (page 4) . "Popular Lecture Series. " Very Good+ Condition, near perfect. (HOLO2-145-23-ADTX)
1st edition. Original 3-color illustrated color wrappers, 8vo, 240 + [3] pages. Annual catalog of publications for this leading American academic press, with listings in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Physical and Biological Sciences, Co-operative Publishing Projects, Journals, and Indexes [sic]; the first 3 of these catagories with between 10-14 further subdivisions by subject. A large number of the publications are by exile scholars from Europe. Crease to front cover, otherwise exceptionally nice, Very Good+ Condition. (holo2-126-32)
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)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers, 12mo, 31 pages. A vivid presentation --compiled with painstaking care and phrased with restraint--of the essential facts concerning the catastrophe which the Jews of Europe are enduring now. " Ex-library with stamps on cover, otherwise Very Good Condition. (Holo2-120-12)
1st edition. Original stapled paper covers, 4to (8.5x11 inch) mimeographed sheets stapled at left, 11, 11 and 4 pages. First three issues of the bulletin for members of the Youth Section of the Workmens Circle (Arbayter Ring) . Updates on Jewish socialists active in southern California. The second issue includes a poignant piece about a college student who committed suicide in despondence over the situation in Europe and the fear that immigrants in the US would be expelled or put in camps. Interesting war-time look at how young left-wing American Jews were responding to the unfolding Holocaust in Europe and changing conditions in the US. No copies on OCLC, so unknown if any later issues were published, but quite possibly complete. First issue has creased pages and a long closed tear to the back cover. Exceedingly rare. Important. (holo2-139-16A)
Folio. 110 pages. In English. In good condition. (Holo2-10-26)
1st edition. Original illustrated paper wrappers. 8vo. 11 pages, 23 cm. In English. A visitors guide for Toledos Holocaust Memorial, created by Lois Dorfman, whose poetry appears in this guide. SUBJECTS: Holocaust memorials -- Ohio -- Toledo. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poetry. No copies in OCLC. Very good condition. Rare. (HOLO2-142-13-A)
Cloth. 4to. 856 pages. In Dutch. Exile Dutch newspaper. A collection of bound original issues dating from July 1944 January 1945, including the critical time leading up to liberation of German occupation. Vrij Nederland (Free Netherlands) was established during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II as an free, weekly underground newspaper. Cover is slightly worn with some bumping at corners. Internal pages are darkened at edges, but all text is clear and binding is tight. Very good condition. (HOLO2-41-29)
1st edition. Original illustrated 4-color paper wrappers, 8vo, 77 pages ; 24 cm. In the original Dutch. With the dramatic cover showing a cartooned SS officer consuming thousands of Jewish civilians, bright red blood dripping from the title, and a bright yellow Jewish star ID surrounding the final word Jood. Title translates as: Vught, Gate of Hell: War memoirs of a Jew. Vught, also known as Hertogenbosch, was a Nazi concentration camp located in Vught near the city of 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands. Herzogenbusch was the only concentration camp run directly by the SS in western Europe outside of Germany. The camp was first used in 1943 and held 31, 000 prisoners. 749 prisoners died in the camp, and the others were transferred to other camps shortly before the camp was liberated by the Allied Forces in 1944 (Wikipedia, 2015) . SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Persecutions. Concentratiekampen. Joden. Tweede Wereldoorlog. OCLC lists 16 copies worldwide, but only 4 in the US (Yale, US Holocaust Museum, Harvard, Ohio State) . Heavy foxing to cover, as often seen on Dutch covers of this vintage, otherwise Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-19) xxx
Hardcover, 199 pages, 8vo, 25 cm. East German expose of the encouragement of old nazi elements in West Germany by the US and Britain to bolster what would become cold warrior forces. SUBJECT (S) : Germany -- Politics and government -- 1945-1990. Germany (West) -- Relations -- United States. United States -- Relations - Germany (West) . Translation of Weissbuch uber die amerikanischenglische Interventionalspolitik in Westdeutschland. Includes index. Ex-library. Hinge repair. Wear to edges of cover. Otherwise, Very Good Condition. (Holo2-18-29)
Pisa, palazzo municipale, 1° dicembre 1974, in-8, br. edit., pp. 26, (2). Con ill. in b.n. A cura del Comitato Regionale Toscano per il 30° della Resistenza e della Liberazione.
1st edition. Original boards. 8vo. 80 pages, includes maps, 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Jews after the War: Report from the First Conference of the Jewish Labor Committee. The Jewish Labor Committee was founded in 1934 in response to the rise of Nazism in Europe. Today, it works to maintain and strengthen the historically strong relationship between the American Jewish community and the trade union movement, and to promote what they see as the shared social justice agenda of both communities (Wikipedia, 2018). OCLC 937355974.SUBJECTS: Holocaust Reconstruction (1939-1951) -- Jews. Very Good Condition. (YID-40-84)
Paper wrappers, 10 pages. In Spanish. Title in English: " Z. Z. W. (Zydowsky Zwiazek Wojksowy) In the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising" Z. Z. W. Was a Jewish Military Union, founded by David Wdowinski (1895-1970) . "The ZZW never integrated into the main underground fighting organization in Warsaw, the Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa (The Jewish Fighting Organization) , but the two groups did coordinate their activities to a certain extent during the spring of 1943. The ZZW did not participate in the first armed clash in the ghetto, in January 1943. During the April uprising its fighters fought fiercely near Muranowska Square, in one of the major battles of the rebellion. Other ZZW men fought in the Brushmakers' area of the ghetto, and still others in the area where supplies were kept. Wdowinski was captured by the Germans during the uprising and was sent to various concentration camps but survived. He settled in the United States after the war and in 1961 was a witness at the Eichmann Trial. He published his memoirs, And We Are Not Saved (1963) . " (Rozette, EJ, 2007) Very good condition. (HOLO2-25-4)
3/4 black button with white silhouette of the Star of David behind caption: We Mourn the Victims of Nazidom. The records of the Synagogue Council of America indicate the button is from c. 1943. Although, this date cannot be verified with certainty, the button is from no later than the late 1940s. Face of button is nice and clean; back has some rust, but overall very good condition. (HOLO2-60-11)
8vo. 4 pages. In English. Index of articles from the Holocaust period. (AMR-27-50)
5704 (1944). Original blank paper wrappers. 8vo. 64 pages. 21 cm. Reprinted in early 1944 for Jewish refugees in Switzerland with some additional notations. In Hebrew and German in parallel columns (with diacritic vowel marks under the Hebrew, and with Yiddish translation between Hebrew). Original 1938 title page, with verso 1944 German title page: Den jüdischen Flüchtlingen in der Schweiz; Zur Feier des [Pesakh]-Festes im Jahre 5704; überreicht vom Schweizerischen Israelitischen Gemeindebund. (For the Jewish Refugees in Switzerland; For the celebration of Pesakh in the year 5704; presented by the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities). Copyright by Lehrberger & Co. of Frankfurt. A European-published hagada from the darkest period of the Holocaust, produced specifically for those feeling the inferno. During 1943 and 1944, the extermination camps were working at a furious rate to kill the hundreds of thousands of people shipped to them by rail from almost every country within the German sphere of influence, and by the spring of 1944, up to 8,000 people were being gassed every day at Auschwitz (USHMM, 2012). Passover 1944 began on April 8, the day that the roundups of the Jews of Carpatho-Ruthenia and northern Hungary started. On April 14, the last day of the Holiday, László Endre & László Baky (German-installed heads of the Ministry of the Interior) and Eichmann made the official decision to deport all the Jews of Hungary. With ten illustrations; an early 19th century German Orthodox Haggadah originally compiled by Wolf Heidenheim in 1822. Published for German-Jewish refugees in Switzerland under the auspices of the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities, founded in 1904 to help protect the general interest of Jews in Switzerland; during the second world war, the Federation helped support the refugee community in Switzerland: Prior to and during the Second World War, Switzerland gave refuge to about 23,000 Jewish refugees although the government decided that Switzerland would serve only as a country of transit. These Jews were protected during the Holocaust due to Swiss neutrality. The Jewish refugees, however, did not receive the financial support from the government that non-Jewish refugees received. Many more Jews were prevented from entering, effectively shutting the border. (Jewish Virtual Library; Switzerland). The publishers, Goldschmidt, issued an earlier printing in 1940 (listed in one library on OCLC), no copies of this issue (1944) listed in libraries on oclc. Subjects: Haggada shel Pesah. German-Jewish Refugees - Schweizerischen Israelitischen Gemeindebund. Holocaust. Previous Owner's name on front wrappers, with "Zurich 5" written underneath. Wraps lightly soiled, with small tear at bottom of backstrip; otherwise Very good condition. Rare and important. (HOLO2-104-15)
8vo. 240 pages. CONTENTS INCLUDE: Nisko: The First Experiment in Deportation by Jonny Moser; The Forgotten Part of the 'Final Solution': The Liquidation of the Ghettos by Wolfgang Scheffler; Jewish U-Boote in Austria, 1938-1945 by C. Gwyn Moser; Nazi Criminals in the United States: The Fedorenko Case by Henry Friedlander & Earlean M. McCarrick; The Burning of the Books in Nazi Germany, 1933: The American Response by Guy Stern; The Search for the Silver Lining: The American Academic Establishment and the 'Aryanization' of German Scholarship by Karen J. Greenberg; Pressing at the Limits: The Challenge of the Hebrew Committee of National Liberation to Chemical Warfare Policy by John Ellis van Courtland Moon; Holocaust Numismatics by Joel J. Forman; Discussing Holocaust Literature by Ruth K. Angress; Refugees and Survivors: Reception in the New World by David S. Wyman; Understanding the SS Imperium by Mishael H. Kater; How Popular was the Third Reich? by Michael H. Kater; Jewish Fate in Hungary by László Varga; Precious Legacy or Tragic Heritage by Jonathan Helfand. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Periodicals; Holocaust; Oorlogsmisdadigers; Opsporing. Very good condition, like new. (holo2-127-4)
8vo. 278 pages. CONTENTS INCLUDE: The Economics of the Final Solution: A Case Study from the General Government by Götz Aly & Susanne Heim; Non-Jewish Children in the Camps by Sybil Milton; Traditional Antisemitism and the Holocaust: The Case of the German Diplomat Curt Prüfer by Donald M. McKale; Three Generations Remember the Holocaust: Hilsenrath, Becker, and Seelich by Dagmar C. G. Lorenz; Out of the Mouths of Monsters: Perspectives on Nazism in Grass and Tournier by Judith Ryan; Concentration Camps in Exile Literature: The Case of Osthofen by Alexander Stephan; Attempts to Settle Jewish Refugees in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1934-1939 by Gerhard P. Bassler; American Radoi Coverage of the Holocaust Joyce Fine; Germany's Special Path to the Holocaust by Donald L. Niewyk; Between Rationality and Irrationalism: George L. Mosse, the Holocaust, and European Cultural History by Steven E. Aschheim; The Fate of Soviet POWs in World War II by John H. E. Fried; Historians of Jewish Resistance by Jan T Gross; Facing Survivors in Fiction and Film by Robert H. Abzug: The Thesaurus of Hell: Twenty-Six Years of the Periodical Przeglad Lekarski-Oswiecim by Wolf Oschlies; Homosexuals in Nazi Germany by Rüdiger Lautmann. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Periodicals; Holocaust; Oorlogsmisdadigers; Opsporing. Very good condition. (Holo2-127-5)
1st edition. Original Orange Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 62 pages + 4 pages of photo plates of atrocities. Very slight discoloration along top edge, otherwise Very Good Condition. (SPEC-35-14)
1st edition. Original Orange Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 32 pages + 8 pages of photo plates of atrocities. With the important stamps on the cover of the Belgian War Crimes Mission (at the British Army of the Rhine) and the Belgian War Crimes Liaison Group. Small stain on cover, otherwise Very Good Condition. (SPEC-35-17)