1 811 résultats
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 75 pages. 21 cm. In Dutch . Series: Rijksinstituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie. Kleine serie geschriften, ; nr. 1. Title translates to English as, German Occupation of the Netherlands and the Financial Development of the Country During the Years of Occupation. Series is overseen by the Dutch Royal Institute for War Documentation. SUBJECT (S) : Finance, Public Netherlands. Financiële ontwikkeling. Bezettingen. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Slight discoloration at edges of cover and on title page. Otherwise nice, clean copy with tight binding. Very good condition. (HOLO2-35-8)
Publishers cloth. 4to. 223 pages. 26 cm. First Dutch edition. Translated from the German. The Yellow Star: The Persecution of the Jews in Europe, 1933-1945. With 196 photographs. Originally published in 1960 in German as Der Gelbe Stern, this landmark book was one of the first comprehensive photographic accounts of the Holocaust. During the 1950s, researchers in Washington, D. C. And London pored over more than 1, 500 tons of photographs and documents seized after World War II. In 1960 Gerhard Schoenberner gathered some 200 photographs from the newly uncovered material, most of them taken by Nazis to chronicle their war against the Jews. Schoenberner named the book after the yellow badge that the Nazis forced the persecuted Jews to wear. With its comprehensive, authoritative presentation of visual and textual evidence, much of which had not yet not been seen before, The Yellow Star shocked the German population and introduced the world to many haunting images. The book endures as one of the most important documentary accounts of the Holocaust, reprinted in many German editions and published in eight languages. The photographs are accompanied by extracts from Nazi and German documents-laws, decrees, and other Reich memoranda, field reports from SS officers and concentration camp directors, newspaper editorials, and other writings. Schoenberner also provides detailed captions to the photographs. Organized chronologically, the book follows the growing scope and terror of the Holocaust, from the first anti-Jewish laws and Kristallnacht to ghetto uprisings and the Final Solution, culminating in the liberation of the death camps. (Publishers description to English edition) . Subjects: Holocaust. Antisemitisme. Europa (geografie) . OCLC lists 14 copies. Light tear to top of backstrip; no DJ; otherwise fresh and clean. Very good condition. (HOLO2-108-31)
1st edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 5 copies. Scarce and Important. Very Good+ Condition. A Beautiful copy. (Holo2-126-1) xx
1st Edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Inscribed by Hakker in 1945 on the first page. Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide. Scarce and Important. Small smudge on page 15 with 1 word effected. Overall Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-1a)
1st Edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Inscribed by Hakker in 1945 on the first page. Also issued in French translation as La lutte heroique du maquis; leur vie, leurs souffrances, leur travail; and in English as "The mysterious Dossin Barracks in Mechlin: the deportation camp pf the Jews. " Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide, with only 4 of them in the US (Hoover, San Jose State, LOC, Wichita State). Scarce and Important.Some wear and stains to cover, worming to one margin (no text affected), Overall Good+ Condition. (Holo2-126-1B)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 75 pages. 21 cm. Cover Title: De Illegale Pers Over Na-Oorlogsche Problemen. Contents/Inhoud: Interpretatie van de gebreken en stroomingen van deze tijd; Plannen voor toekomstige hervormingen, speciaal in Nederland (Sociale en Economische) ; De basis van ons staatsapparaat; Hervorming van ons staatsapparaat. OCLC lists 2 copies worldwide (Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, University of Groningen) . Cover and title page are slightly discolored with some stains, but all text is clear. Internal pages are darkened at edges. Binding it tight. Good condition. (HOLO2-41-7)
1st Edition thus. Original Illustrated photographic Wrappers with Photographs of Anti-Jewish Nazi Signs and Propaganda. 8vo. 28 pages ; 22 cm. In Dutch. Title translates into English as, The Disenfranchisement of the Jews in Germany. An early publication by the Committee for Special Jewish Affairs (CBJB) . The (CBJB) was an organization for Jewish refugees in the Netherlands from April 1933 to March 1941 The CBJB mediated in matters concerning emigration, exit visas and residence permits. (Wikipedia, 2017) It was founded by David Cohen and Abraham Asscher, and is more frequently associated with The Committee for Jewish Refugees (Dutch: Comité voor Joodsche Vluchtelingen) , a Dutch charitable organization which was an offshoot of the CBJB. The committee(s) , at first, managed the Jewish refugees who were fleeing the Nazi regime in Germany. These refugees were crossing the border from Germany into the Netherlands. The Committee largely decided which of the refugees could remain in the Netherlands. The others generally returned to Germany. For the refugees permitted to stay, it provided support in several ways. These included direct financial aid and assistance with employment and with further emigration. (Wikipdia, 2017) An earlier, scarcer publication of the same name was issued in 1933, with reports on Antisemitic activity in Germany during the first year of the Nazi regime. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Germany -- History -- Persecutions. 1933-1945. National socialism. OCLC lists 19 copies worldwide. Pen mark on corner of front cover, otherwise very good condition. (HOLO2-135-15)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 112 pages. Ill. 24 cm. 5e Herziene Druk. In Dutch. A guide through the "silent witness" exhibit at the National War and Resistance Museum in Holland. Series: De stamboom van een museum, dl. 2. ISBN: 9080190624. OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide. Nice, clean copy with tight binding. Very good condition. (HOLO2-41-4)
Cloth. 4to (large) . 71 pages. Photos. 30 cm. In Dutch. A collection of black and white photos of the remains of concentration camps in Poland. Abstract: Fotoboek met zwart-witte opnamen. SUBJECT(S) : Concentratiekampen. ISBN: 9067280240. Some discoloration to cover and along spine. Internal pages are nice and clean with tight binding. Very good condition. (HOLO2-41-11)
grand in-8°, 254 pages, broche, couverture illustree plast. Tres bel exemplaire. [109B-5]
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 48 p. ; 21 cm. In Dutch. Title translates into English as, The Second World War and its Victim: Text Of Four Guest Lecturers on the Prosecution of Jews, Gypsies and Homosexuals. Lectures on persecution during World War II. Includes two lectures by the famous Dutch historian and holocaust survivor Loe de Jong, whos magnum opus Het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden in de Tweede Wereldoorlog (The Kingdom of the Netherlands During World War II) , in fourteen volumes and 18, 000 pages, is the standard reference on the history of the Netherlands during World War II. (Wikipedia, 2016) Also includes a lecture titled, The Persecution of Homosexuals, by the esteemed Dutch sociologist and gay rights activist Rob Tielman. OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide, only one copy in US (Univ. Of South Florida) . In very good+ condition. (holo2-131-27) xx
Softcover, 168 pages, illustrated, group portraits, 12mo, 20 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Communism -- United States - 1917. Wear to cover binding and edges. Light wear. Otherwise, very good condition. (Holo2-21-5)
Debenedetti Giacomo Debenedetti Giacomo. 16 ottobre 1943. Il Saggiatore. 1961-II. Milano, Il Saggiatore 1961-II italiano, in sedicesimo pp. 68 30735 Debenedetti Giacomo. 16 ottobre 1943. Il Saggiatore. 1961-II - In 16 - cartonato - pp.68 - ottimo
Original Wraps. 8vo. 361 pages. 24 cm. First edition. Advince Reders Cipy. A work of fiction concerning the community of 20, 000 Jewish refugees residing in Shanghai in the early 1940s; based on unpublished documents and interviews. Subjects: World War, 1939-1945 - China - Shanghai - Fiction. Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945 - Fiction. Jews - China - Shanghai - Fiction. Shanghai (China) - Fiction. Jewish fiction. War stories. World War, 1939-1945 - China - Shanghai - Fiction. Sino-Japanese Conflict, 1937-1945 - Fiction. Jewish fiction. War stories. Shanghai (China) - Fiction. Light wear to wraps, otherwise fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-104-49)
Softcover, 12mo, 68 pages. In Swedish. The Wandering Jews. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide (Nat Libr of Sweden) . Chipping to edges of pages. Lightwear to edges and corners of cover. Good condition. (Holo2-67-1)
Paper Wraps. 1st edition thus (not a reprint) 39 pages. 28 cm. A collection of foreign policy press releases from the State Department and the White House, as well as statements from the President and Secretary of State, and various articles on international affairs. Contents of this issue include: The Nurnberg Judgment: A Summary, by Katherine B. Fite; U. S. Polish Agreement on Compensation Claims. Some fraying to cover at binding and some tears on back cover. Internal pages are slightly darkened but all text is clear aside from one paragraph on inside back cover. Good condition. (HOLO2-41-16)
(FT) Original Wrappers. 8vo. 55 pages. 23 cm. First edition. Title page verso: The Old Man of Lompaduni and other Stories. This beautifully illustrated book of childrens stories is printed in seven colors of ink. The author of these seven stories in Yiddish was Yuri Suhl, who emigrated from Poland to the United States in the 1920s, and became well known as a Yiddish poet and childrens writer. His other works included the popular "They Fought Back: The Story of Jewish Resistance in Nazi Europe. " That work was praised as a landmark contribution to Holocaust literature and Suhl spent more than five years documenting it before it was published in 1967. His other works included "Eloquent Crusader: Ernestine Rose, " a biography of the Polish-born feminist, and two autobiographical novels: "One Foot in America" and "Cowboy on a Wooden Horse. " He was also a trustee of the fund set up for the sons of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. The illustrator, William Gropper (18971977) , a cartoonist, painter, lithographer, and muralist; he grew up in the lower east side, and an aunt of his died in the triangle shirtwaist factory fire. He was a dedicated left wing political cartoonist for both English and Yiddish papers. During the second half of the 1930s, Gropper dedicated his art to the efforts to raise popular opposition to fascism in Europe. Following World War II, Gropper traveled to Poland to attend the inaugural convention of the World Congress of Intellectuals for Peace of 1948 in Wroclaw. This Yiddish childrens book was printed there, both for an audience of international anti-fascist partisans and survivors gathering to found the World Peace Council, as well as for those survivors living in Wroclaw, one of the largest post-war Jewish communities in Poland for a few years. Rare, OCLC lists 12 copies. Subjects: Children's stories, Yiddish. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Front cover repaired with tape, edges chipped. All pages lightly aged, but clean and fresh. Good condition. Scarce and important (HOLO2-97-42)
1st edition. Original cloth. 4to, x + 205 (English) + 396 (Yiddish) + v pages. Illustartions throughout. Bialystok's strength rests only in its extraordinary features but in its normal characteristics as well. The fifty thousand living there are doing reasonably well financially and also spiritually, like other Jews in Poland. Still, Bialystok was the first, at the end of the German occupation after World War I, to abolish its autocratic community leadership, replacing it with an exemplary democratic system that will do down in history. The Hebraist movement in Bialystok was only a part of the diffuse cultural advance in all of Poland. But when Bialystok established its Hebrew Gymnasium (high school) it was the rank and file Jews, not the radical Hebraists, who erected it. The tall, sturdy building evoked the admiration of the local community as well as of visitors from near and far, especially since it could accommodate seven hundred students. The Yiddish influence in Bialystok was also only a part of the Yiddish movement in all of Poland and in the entire world. But with the exception of Wilno, no other Jewish town besides Bialystok was able to fashion such an intricate Yiddish school network, let alone a high school, despite difficult circumstances. The orphan problem became one of the most critical social issues in Bialystok after World War I. Surely no other city had someone like Mrs. Rabinowicz, who, when the situation became next to hopeless, was the only leader in all of Poland who went to America to obtain the necessary assistance for these unfortunate children. It is possible to mention hundreds of other examples of community and private initiatives in Bialystok which clearly depict its special atmosphere of effervescing creativity a contagion transmitted from one to another compelling everyone to outdo his neighbour. Such is the breeding ground for important accomplishments. (Pejsach Kaplan, a prominent Bialystoker writer and social activist) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Memorial books (Holocaust) . Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19303249. Ex library with usual marks, inscription on front end page by Max Ranter, Honorary Chairman of the Book Committee. Very Good Condition Overall (YIZ-16-2A)xx
1st edition. Original cloth with dust jacket. 4to, x+ 205 (English) + 396 (Yiddish) + v pages. Illustrations throughout. Bialystok's strength rests only in its extraordinary features but in its normal characteristics as well. The fifty thousand living there are doing reasonably well financially and also spiritually, like other Jews in Poland. Still, Bialystok was the first, at the end of the German occupation after World War I, to abolish its autocratic community leadership, replacing it with an exemplary democratic system that will do down in history. The Hebraist movement in Bialystok was only a part of the diffuse cultural advance in all of Poland. But when Bialystok established its Hebrew Gymnasium (high school) it was the rank and file Jews, not the radical Hebraists, who erected it. The tall, sturdy building evoked the admiration of the local community as well as of visitors from near and far, especially since it could accommodate seven hundred students. The Yiddish influence in Bialystok was also only a part of the Yiddish movement in all of Poland and in the entire world. But with the exception of Wilno, no other Jewish town besides Bialystok was able to fashion such an intricate Yiddish school network, let alone a high school, despite difficult circumstances. The orphan problem became one of the most critical social issues in Bialystok after World War I. Surely no other city had someone like Mrs. Rabinowicz, who, when the situation became next to hopeless, was the only leader in all of Poland who went to America to obtain the necessary assistance for these unfortunate children. It is possible to mention hundreds of other examples of community and private initiatives in Bialystok which clearly depict its special atmosphere of effervescing creativity a contagion transmitted from one to another compelling everyone to outdo his neighbour. Such is the breeding ground for important accomplishments. (Pejsach Kaplan, a prominent Bialystoker writer and social activist) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Bialystok. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jews. Memorial books (Holocaust) . Jewish (1939-1945) Ethnic relations. OCLC: 19303249. Dust jacket has light wear on edges and corners, else near perfect condition. Very Good Condition overall. (YIZ-16-2B)xx
(FT) Original Publishers Cloth. Xv, 390 pages. Facsim. Ports. 24 cm. In Yiddish. Added English title on verso: The Spiritual Resistance of the Jews in the Ghettos and Concentration Camps. SUBJECT(S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Judaism -- 20th century. Includes bibliographical references. Nice, clean copy in very good condition. (HOLO2-70-15)
(FT) Hardcover, 8vo, 187 pages, 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as The fate of Jews among the nations: an analytical look into the war-trilogy of Mendel Mann. SUBJECT(S) : Holocaust, Jewish, in literature. Mann, Mendel, 1916-1975 -- Criticism and interpretation. Title on added title page: Der goirl fun Yidn zwishn di umes-hooylem. Aroysgegebn durkhn Eli? Ezer Pines-fond far k? Ultur un literatur. Other Titles: Goirl fun Yidn zwishn di umes-hooylem. OCLC lists 24 copies worldwide. Ex-library. Hinge repair. Some stained pages. Otherwise, good condition. (Holo2-68-15)
1st edition. Original illustrated wrappers. 8vo. 57 pages, 22 cm. In German. Title translates to The Jewish Runner. Inscribed by the author on the inside front cover. Published in Berlin the year after the 1936 Olympics there. Felix Daniel Pinczower (1901-1993) was a German-Jewish sportsman and journalist who played for the Jewish "Hakoach" Berlin. While working as a sports journalist he covered the second Maccabiah, held in Tel-Aviv in 1935 and the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Pinczower immigrated to Eretz Israel in 1939 after being arrested on Kristallnacht for five weeks. SUBJECTS: Running in the Bible. OCLC lists 6 copies in the US (HUC, LBI, YIVO, Harvard, LOC, Spertus) (OCLC:9894449). Light edge wear to wrappers. Very good condition. (YID-41-47)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 48, 48, 44 pages. 22 cm. Three issues of the monthly Austrian Social Democratic journal edited in Prague by Otto Bauer, the former Minister of Foreign Affairs. Nr. 6, Juni 1935; Nr. 7, Juli 1935; Nr. 12, Dezember 1935. Contents of these issues include: Das Proletariat und der Krieg, Austriacus; Zwiesp? Ltiges Wahlergebnis in der CSR, Josef Hofbrauer; Wirtschaftsentwicklung und Klassenkampfe im faschistischen Osterreich, Otto Brauer; Betriebswahlen in Deutschland, S. A. Hauser; "Der neue Kurs in der Sowjetunion, " Otto Bauer; "Der Weg zum Faschismus, " Julius Deutsch; "Ein verwesendes Regime, " Peter Roberts; "Entwicklung und Aufgaben der illegalen Bewegung in Oesterreich, " Austriacus; "Komintern-Kongress, Arbeitereinheit und Sowjetproblem, " Theodor Dan; "Die Internatonale und der Krieg, " H. W. ; "Aus der spanischen Arbeiterbewegung, " J. Rivera. OCLC lists four copies worldwide (Universit? T Bibl Johann Christian Senckenberg, Universit? T Marburg, Danish Union CAT & Danish National Library, University of Bern) . Covers are lightly worn with some pencil marking. Cover for issue 12 is absent with page one detached and chipping, but present; all text is clear. Good+ condition. (HOLO2-55-1) .
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 40 pages. 22 cm. One issue of the monthly Austrian Social Democratic journal edited in Prague by Otto Bauer, the former Minister of Foreign Affairs. Contents of this issue include: "Der Sozialismus und die deutsche Frage, " Otto Bauer; "Wo stehen wir?" Austriacus; "Die Intellektuellen und die revolutionare Bewegung in Osterreich, " M. Mautner; "Bilder aus der deutschen Gegenwart, " Peter Roberts. OCLC lists four copies worldwide (Universit? T Bibl Johann Christian Senckenberg, Universit? T Marburg, Danish Union CAT & Danish National Library, University of Bern) . Covers show some wear at binding and along edge. Internal pages are tanned, but nice and clean; all text is clear. Very good condition. (HOLO2-55-3) .
Original Cloth. 8vo. 189 pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. The Mother's Will: Songs and Poems. Important collection of postwar poetry by Chaim Grade. With frontispiece portrait of the author's mother. "In 1950, he [Grade] received a prize from the World Congress of Jewish Culture for Der Mames Tsavoe ('My Mother's Will, ' 1949) , which includes some of the most outstanding lyrics in Yiddish, permeated with love and respect for his mother, who perished during the Holocaust. " - 2008 EJ. Subjects: Yiddish Poetry Chaim Grade. Front hinge loose; boards wavy from water damage, first few leaves wavy from water damage, otherwise clean and fresh. Fair condition. (YID-21-40)